Books On Sale

Non-Fiction, Historical Mysteries, & More

  • The Rook

    The Rook by Daniel O'Malley

    RECOMMENDED: The Rook by Daniel O’Malley $2.99! Carrie loves the series, especially the sequel Stiletto. It’s urban fantasy set in London with a badass cast of characters. But some found the book to have a lot of info-dumping. Have you read The Rook?

    “The body you are wearing used to be mine.” So begins the letter Myfanwy Thomas is holding when she awakes in a London park surrounded by bodies all wearing latex gloves. With no recollection of who she is, Myfanwy must follow the instructions her former self left behind to discover her identity and track down the agents who want to destroy her.

    She soon learns that she is a Rook, a high-ranking member of a secret organization called the Chequy that battles the many supernatural forces at work in Britain. She also discovers that she possesses a rare, potentially deadly supernatural ability of her own.

    In her quest to uncover which member of the Chequy betrayed her and why, Myfanwy encounters a person with four bodies, an aristocratic woman who can enter her dreams, a secret training facility where children are transformed into deadly fighters, and a conspiracy more vast than she ever could have imagined.

    Filled with characters both fascinating and fantastical, THE ROOK is a richly inventive, suspenseful, and often wry thriller that marks an ambitious debut from a promising young writer.

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  • Raw Dog

    Raw Dog by Jamie Loftus

    Raw Dog by Jamie Loftus is $2.99! I mentioned this one in a previous Get Rec’d because I love hot dogs and I was curious. I wound up getting it on audio, but haven’t started. If you, too, were curious about this one, it’s now on sale!

    A NEW YORK TIMES AND INDIE BESTSELLER!

    Part travelogue, part culinary history, all capitalist critique—comedian Jamie Loftus’s debut, Raw Dog , will take you on a cross-country road trip in the summer of 2021, and reveal what the creation, culture, and class influence of hot dogs says about America now.

    Featured NPR Weekend Edition • Bon Appétit • Oprah Daily • Glamour • NY Mag • Splendid Table • The Wall Street Journal • Eater • Betches • USA Today • Boston Globe • Eater • Slate • The Next Big Idea Club • Buzzfeed and more

    “Wise and funny” —ANDY RICHTER • “Revealing, funny, sad, horny, and insatiably curious” —SARAH MARSHALL • “A wild ride” —ROBERT EVANS • “Deeply incisive and hilariously honest” —JACK O’BRIEN • “Gonzo yet vulnerable” —GABE DUNN • “Hot dog Moby-Dick ” —BRANSON REESE • “One of the freshest and most insightful new comedic voices of this decade.” —LINDSAY ELLIS

    Hot dogs. Poor people created them. Rich people found a way to charge fifteen dollars for them. They’re high culture, they’re low culture, they’re sports food, they’re kids’ food, they’re hangover food, and they’re deeply American, despite having no basis whatsoever in America’s Indigenous traditions. You can love them, you can hate them, but you can’t avoid the great American hot dog.

    Raw The Naked Truth About Hot Dogs is part investigation into the cultural and culinary significance of hot dogs and part travelog documenting a cross-country road trip researching them as they’re served today. From avocado and spice in the West to ass-shattering chili in the East to an entire salad on a slice of meat in Chicago, Loftus, her pets, and her ex eat their way across the country during the strange summer of 2021. It’s a brief window into the year between waves of a plague that the American government has the resources to temper, but not the interest.

    So grab a dog, lay out your picnic blanket, and dig into the delicious and inevitable product of centuries of violence, poverty, and ambition, now rolling around at your local 7-Eleven.

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  • A Morbid Taste for Bones

    A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters

    RECOMMENDED: A Morbid Taste for Bones by Ellis Peters is $3.99 at Amazon! This is book one in The Chronicles of Brother Cadfael series, which I remember Sarah enjoying. Here’s what she said:

    This book and the next few books of the series got me through the scariest parts of early Quarantimes.

    On an expedition to acquire a saint’s remains, Brother Cadfael instead finds intrigue and murder

    It is 1137, and the ambitious head of Shrewsbury Abbey wishes to acquire the remains of Saint Winifred for the glory of his Benedictine order. Brother Cadfael is part of the expedition sent to the saint’s final resting place in Wales, where he finds the villagers divided over the Benedictines’ quest.

    When the leading opponent to moving the grave is shot dead with a mysterious arrow, some believe Winifred herself delivered the blow. Brother Cadfael knows that an earthly hand did the killing. But he doesn’t know that his plan to root out a murderer may dig up a case of love and justice, where the waves of sin may be scandal—or his own ruin.

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  • Murder at Mallowan Hall

    Murder at Mallowan Hall by Colleen Cambridge

    Murder at Mallowan Hall by Colleen Cambridge is $1.99! Sarah mentioned this one in last October’s Hide Your Wallet. It’s a historical house party mystery starring Agatha Christie’s housekeeper. I believe book two is also on sale.

    The first in an exciting new historical mystery series set in the home of Agatha Christie!

    Colleen Cambridge’s charming and inventive new historical series introduces an unforgettable heroine in Phyllida Bright, fictional housekeeper for none other than famed mystery novelist Agatha Christie. When a dead body is found during a house party at the home of Agatha Christie and her husband Max Mallowan, it’s up to famous author’s head of household, Phyllida Bright, to investigate…

    Tucked away among Devon’s rolling green hills, Mallowan Hall combines the best of English tradition with the modern conveniences of 1930. Housekeeper Phyllida Bright, as efficient as she is personable, manages the large household with an iron fist in her very elegant glove. In one respect, however, Mallowan Hall stands far apart from other picturesque country houses…

    The manor is home to archaeologist Max Mallowan and his famous wife, Agatha Christie. Phyllida is both loyal to and protective of the crime writer, who is as much friend as employer. An aficionado of detective fiction, Phyllida has yet to find a gentleman in real life half as fascinating as Mrs. Agatha’s Belgian hero, Hercule Poirot. But though accustomed to murder and its methods as frequent topics of conversation, Phyllida is unprepared for the sight of a very real, very dead body on the library floor…

    A former Army nurse, Phyllida reacts with practical common sense–and a great deal of curiosity. It soon becomes clear that the victim arrived at Mallowan Hall under false pretenses during a weekend party. Now, Phyllida not only has a houseful of demanding guests on her hands–along with a distracted, anxious staff–but hordes of reporters camping outside. When another dead body is discovered–this time, one of her housemaids–Phyllida decides to follow in M. Poirot’s footsteps to determine which of the Mallowans’ guests is the killer. With help from the village’s handsome physician, Dr. Bhatt, Mr. Dobble, the butler, along with other household staff, Phyllida assembles the clues. Yet, she is all too aware that the killer must still be close at hand and poised to strike again. And only Phyllida’s wits will prevent her own story from coming to an abrupt end…

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    This book is on sale at:
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Comments are Closed

  1. Todd says:

    I enjoyed the entire Cadfael series (yes, there’s a bunch of them) as well as books in other series and non-series by the author. And The Rook is also enjoyable; I think I bought it from an earlier sales notice here. Stiletto I didn’t enjoy as much, but it’s also good.

  2. MirandaB says:

    I love the Rook series, including the newest, Blitz!

  3. Jill Q. says:

    I could not get into the Rook, I just found it emotionally distant and too much telling vs showing but it’s not really my preferred genre, so feel free to take with a big grain of salt.

    Brother Cadfael have become comfort audio thanks to Sarah’s rec here. I actually really only enjoy them October through February. Something about walking in the brisk air and listening to Brother Cadfael be both funny and wise in a no-nonsense way is very invigorating during a chilly/sometimes gloomy time of year. Almost time to listen to some more.

  4. flchen1 says:

    Holidays with the Wongs: The Complete Series by Jackie Lau is on sale for $2.99 today and tomorrow. It includes:

    Book 1: A Match Made for Thanksgiving
    Book 2: A Second Chance Road Trip for Christmas
    Book 3: A Fake Girlfriend for Chinese New Year
    Book 4: A Big Surprise for Valentine’s Day

    Sybil Bartel’s Scandalous, Talon, SEAL, and Hard Limit are currently free.
    Cynthia Wright’s Smuggler’s Moon is currently free.

  5. Sandra says:

    BN has a box set of the first three Brother Cadfael books for $5.99.They list A Morbid Taste for Bones at full price, but have several others at $2.99 and Summer of the Danes, which is one of my favorites, at $1.99.

    I’ve had the books in paper since forever. I’ve been trying to add ebooks, but the pricing is all over the place. I love the books, but am not going to pay $20 for a 30yo book.

  6. Melanie says:

    @Sandra, the Brother Cadfael ebooks do go on sale fairly regularly. Like you, I love them but didn’t want to pay full price for older books that are also fairly short. Eventually I collected all of them for two to three dollars apiece on sale.

  7. Msb says:

    Big Brother Cadfael fan here; they are superlative cosy mysteries. I even visited Shrewsbury to see the Abbey, which is still standing, and to see the battlefield, described in A Bloody Field by Shrewsbury, set at a much later time than Cadfael’s adventures. New readers, be warned, however, the attractive young lovers in each book are never the killers

  8. Ely says:

    I absolutely LOVED The Rook, and really disliked Stiletto as well as Blitz. Totally understand why people don’t love it – I literally described it to a friend as “if Wikipedia had a plot”. For whatever reason, reading a book that was a series of dictionary entries interspersed with some plot really did it for me. I hated Stiletto (probably bc of a deus ex machina that I really should have seen coming, so I’m cranky at a book that made me feel silly) and thought Blitz was fine, really.

  9. wingednike says:

    I really enjoyed The Rook because Myfanwy had a great voice. Stiletto was OK and an interesting take from “the enemies” point of view.

  10. Darlynne says:

    @Msb: My sister and I drove around Wales in 1994 and stopped to visit the abbey where we encountered The Shrewsbury Quest: http://www.cadfael.de/html/es-s-quest.html

    We almost didn’t go in, thinking it had to be just a tourist gimmick, and, wow, was I wrong. Everything Cadfael set out in detail and with great care. I went back several times over the years, until floods in Shrewsbury proved too much. Still a dream.

    As for The Chequy series: Loved them all, especially the audio books; hated the TV series. Complicated, inexplicable — all of it — but my admiration for Myfanwy is boundless. Also BLITZ introduced the early days of The Chequy (amazing women) and Lynette, a contemporary recruit who has the best lines of dialog ever.

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