Here are the week’s top curated ebook picks, including young adult hit “The Gender Game,” art mystery “The Brodsky Affair” and several more.
Click on a book cover to go to its Amazon page. Note: Kindle ebooks can be read on any device (smartphone, tablet, computer) through the free Kindle app.
Indie book bargain of the week
99 cents on Kindle
The Gender Game
By Bella Forrest
Publisher: Nightlight (the author’s imprint)
418 pages
Young adult fiction: Fantasy, romance, action and mystery infuse this story about a 19-year-old woman coping in a world divided by gender. Reminiscent of The Hunger Games, the book continues to set sales records atop the Amazon best-seller charts.
Top ebook deals of the week
99-cent Countdown Deal expires Thursday at midnight
The Brodsky Affair
By Ken Fry
Publisher: Ken Fry
454 pages
Suspense: A smart tale of murder, mystery and intrigue in the elite British art world.
Free on Kindle for a limited time
Critical Vulnerability
By Melissa F. Miller
Publisher: Brown Street Books (the author’s imprint)
258 pages
Thriller: A federal prosecutor confronts a hidden cyber-enemy that threatens to destroy her.
$1.99 on Kindle, free on Kindle Unlimited
David Lynch: The Man from Another Place
By Dennis Lim
Publisher: Dennis Lim
196 pages
Nonfiction: The author proposes several lenses through which to view filmmaker/pop culture icon/industry outsider Lynch in this “smart, concise book.”
Free on Kindle for a limited time
The Amulet Thief
By Luanne Bennett
Publisher: The Word Lounge (the author’s imprint)
325 pages
Fantasy: A young woman returns to New York to find answers about her mother’s murder and why she was abandoned at age eight—but not before encountering supernatural creatures.
Indie film watch
Be on the lookout for the new indie movie “RGB,” an intimate portrait of Ruth Bader Ginsburg where filmmakers were given unprecedented access to the Supreme Court justice.
Writes lifestyle brand Refinery29: “The smash hit Sundance documentary @RBGMovie is finally coming to theaters … and honestly, all other movies can just go home.”