Join Amazon First Reads newsletter to discover new books every month. SUBSCRIBE
You are now subscribed to the Amazon First Reads newsletter.
Please try again later.
Early access to an editors' pick
for only £0.99
PLUS get this month's bonus short read
Learn more
Amazon First Reads is a program that offers customers early access to new books across popular genres.
  • Every month customers can choose one of the Kindle books selected by our editors for £0.99 each, or £0.00 for Prime members. This month, customers can also get a bonus short read for £0.99, or £0.00 for Prime members.
  • Amazon First Reads Kindle books can be read on any compatible Kindle device or free Kindle reading app and become part of customers’ permanent libraries.
  • Joining is free with no purchase obligation. By joining, you receive a monthly e-mail announcing new Amazon First Reads picks. You can unsubscribe from the monthly e-mail at any time by visiting Amazon Delivers E-mail Subscriptions in Your Account.
Please also note:
  • Amazon First Reads on Amazon.co.uk is available to UK customers only.
  • Kindle Unlimited subscribers can borrow most Amazon First Reads books (subject to title availability within Kindle Unlimited) when they are released. Learn more about Kindle Unlimited.

Prime members enjoy a Kindle book and a bonus short read for £0.00 this month. Already a Prime member? Sign in now
3.7 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Bonus Short Read

3.7 out of 5 stars (1270)
£0.99 (Save £1.00)
#1 New York Times bestselling author Max Brooks can see the future. Or at least he can imagine it more convincingly (and frighteningly) than most. But even when he’s looking at a worst-case scenario, as he did in his novel World War Z, he injects enough faith in humanity to keep me reading and rooting for the characters he’s brought to life.

Set decades in the future, this speculative story takes the form of a desperate letter written by an officer in the Chinese army to a civilian friend back home. During the invasion of Los Angeles, superior technology—weapons, media, AI-assisted strategy—was supposed to crush all resistance. But the reality is a little more complicated. As a guerrilla war grinds on, the unnamed officer finds himself questioning everything he thought he knew. Speaking out is the most dangerous thing he could do—but it also may be the only way to save his son from following him into another “forever war.”

This is not a story about technology, despite the fascinating details Max drops in. It’s about ordinary people—on both sides—putting their lives on the line for a better world.

—Kjersti Egerdahl, Editor
4.1 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Thriller

4.1 out of 5 stars (1437)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
If my child went missing from school and, fifteen years later, she had still not been found, could I abandon hope of uncovering what really happened? Could I ever forgive? These are questions I pray I never have to ask myself—but that haunted my thoughts long after I put Girl, Missing down.

The authors leverage this most desperate of scenarios so well that you’re at once caught up in the terrifying set-up of events. While the school community might have forgotten, Gem is a mother who cannot forget and is still in a desperate search for the truth. So when remains are found at the school all those years later, Gem wants answers.

Gem’s plight and heartache dominate this novel. As she continues to battle social status and authorities who would rather forget past events, Gem’s tenacity shines through…but so do the cracks that this upheaval has caused to her spirit.

Exploring relatable themes such as single parenting, motherhood, and loss,
Girl, Missing is a blistering tale of psychological suspense that pulled at my heartstrings and had me guessing until the very last chapter.

—Sammia Hamer, Editor
4.4 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Book Club Fiction

4.4 out of 5 stars (702)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
In this heartwarming and #uglycry time-travel romance for fans of Taylor Jenkins Reid’s Maybe in Another Life and the movie About Time, Julia and Alex’s love story will have you swooning and wondering just how far you would go to save the love of your life.

Julia’s life seems to be falling apart. Job, friends, love life…nothing seems to be going to plan. Plus, at twenty-five, she’s now developed the same narcolepsy that her mother had, so she can add falling asleep at tables in restaurants and on the tube ride home—and more embarrassing moments—to that list. The only good thing in her life is her reoccurring dream about her perfect man…She knows Alex isn’t real, but right now she’ll take him existing in her incredibly realistic dreams over her dead-end life any day.

Until she finds out that Alex actually did exist—but he died one year ago. How can Julia be dreaming about a man who used to be alive but whom she never met? How can she feel so certain that he is the one? Confused, Julia falls into her dream once again, this time knowing she’ll do anything to save Alex and give them a chance at a “happily ever after”—only to wake up and discover that her dream might not have been a dream at all…

—Victoria Oundjian, Editor
4.6 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Literary Fiction

4.6 out of 5 stars (35)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
Our past is never far away, no matter how far we swim; it is always lurking beneath the surface. Sometimes we are able to glide over it unnoticed and undisturbed, but other times an errant kick stirs it all up again. For Eliza, there is no escape from the memories of her final summer with her friends Eric and Maggie and the heatwave that seemed to deposit a sticky residue as soon as you stepped outside, leaving the imprint of those last days of hazy pre-university life forever on her skin.

Their friendship ended shockingly in one afternoon, and Maggie disappeared, taking the truth of what happened with her. Now twenty years later, Eliza’s daily morning swim at the Hampstead Ponds is her only way to remember those picture-perfect days and attempt to outswim her guilt. Until she spots a woman who looks just like Maggie…

This might be Eliza’s last chance to find out the truth. As the memories of that summer begin to unfurl, will they help her unravel the past or only pull her further under? This unputdownable and beautiful novel explores the addictive and oppressive teenage friendships that can maintain a hold on us long after they are over.

—Victoria Oundjian, Editor
3.9 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Suspense

3.9 out of 5 stars (385)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
At countless sleepovers during my childhood, I’d stand in front of a mirror, chant “Bloody Mary” three times, and scream. The girls on the other side of the bathroom door would explode with laughter, and we would all compare stories about the time we were sure we saw the specter eager for our souls.

I was (pretty) sure Bloody Mary wasn’t real. But in Kat Davis’s unsettling debut,
In a Dark Mirror, that’s not the case. Maddie was twelve the first time she played the game with Lana, serving “Him”—an apparently otherworldly presence with unsettling demands. And she was twelve when she was arrested for attempted murder. Now twenty-two and rehabilitated, Maddie isn’t sure what to think when she finds an online community that reveres her crime and claims to serve Him.

Told in a dual timeline,
In a Dark Mirror captures the true-crime vibe and emotional vulnerability of Jess Lourey’s The Quarry Girls and blends it with the haunting and relevant horror of early Stephen King and a terrifying urban myth. The result is an unputdownable novel that reads like a viral Creepypasta story and is sure to haunt even my waking hours.

—Jessica Tribble Wells, Editor
4.4 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Women's Fiction

4.4 out of 5 stars (1302)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)

Have you ever taken a quiet stroll through an old rural cemetery on a spring day? I used to love walking through the field of gravestones behind my grandmother’s house, uncovering the worn letters etched into the flat stone markers, with a light breeze at my back, lazy bumblebees circling my ankles, and humidity sticking loose tendrils of hair to my neck. It felt peaceful and not-quite sad but…wistful.

Who walked those paths before me, and whose lives are commemorated by the grown-over graves? And for that matter, who carved the stones, dedicating their artistry and skill to preserving the memory of others?

Mary Ellen Taylor’s latest novel, The Promise of Tomorrow, explores how the mementos we leave behind—headstones, photographs, love letters, family recipes, and unfinished bucket lists—can change the lives of those who loved us, sometimes for generations. Our main character, Olympia, returns home for a happy occasion, but, once there, she must reckon with some of the sadness she’d run from.

It’s a poignant, heartfelt story that brought me back to memories of my grandmother’s house with that grassy field, her Sunday dinners, and the boundless curiosity I felt about the family members who lived before me and who I never met.

—Alison Dasho, Editor

4.5 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Romance

4.5 out of 5 stars (842)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
Do you believe that love is fated? That perhaps, it can even be predicted—if you know where to look or who to ask? Mimi Perkins, the loveable protagonist of Let’s Pretend This Will Work, certainly does, and so when her quirky psychic delivers the news that she is soon to find her great love, she dives in headfirst to her current, whirlwind romance. Sure, Ren has proposed after only knowing her for a few months, and she hasn’t even met his adult daughters, but this has been foretold. What could possibly go wrong?

Well, it turns out, quite a lot. The same night as their engagement, Ren’s ex-wife is in a car accident, and he returns to his old home to care for his family. Mimi leaves behind her life in the big city to be near her fiancé, accepting a job at the local daycare. Ren is busy, but Mimi has more than enough to fill her time, from the wild children to the unorthodox ways of the center to the parental drama. Her heart is fuller than it has ever been…until the daycare itself is threatened, as is her relationship status. Mimi must decide what she’s willing to fight for, or if maybe, just maybe, she should just leave it up to the stars.

While I can’t say that I’ve ever been to a psychic, I can certainly see the appeal in leaving matters of life and love up to fate. But the ever-practical side of me believes that sometimes even fate can use a little nudge—which Mimi is about to find out in this delightful, heartwarming, romantic tale from the bestselling author of
Matchmaking for Beginners.

—Melissa Valentine, Editor
4.3 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Contemporary Fiction

4.3 out of 5 stars (517)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
Namrata Patel’s stories are filled with tender moments of family and friendship, a dash of mystery, and Indian-American flavor. In this new novel, our main protagonist, Tulsi Gupta, must decide whether to follow in the footsteps of the generations of Gupta women before her or find a path that’s all her own.

Tulsi, her mother, Devi, and her grandmother Aruna ba run a small spice shop in Salem, Massachusetts. The Gupta women are known for their healing concoctions, using thousands of years of Ayurvedic knowledge to create blends of medicinal spices and herbs for customers to help heal their ailments. Tulsi’s mother and grandmother expect her to take over the shop…but Tulsi? She’s not sure she wants to keep up this centuries-old tradition. When she finds a letter her grandmother wrote, Tulsi uncovers secrets that could change all of their lives. Now, Tulsi is determined to heal old family wounds while finding her true purpose.

This story moved me. I felt Tulsi’s personal journey as she struggled to combat expectations and continue a family’s legacy—whatever that may look like. I hope you enjoy this beautiful and deeply nuanced read as much as I did.

—Megha Parekh, Editor
4.1 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Mystery

4.1 out of 5 stars (409)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
In this immersive page-turner from the two-time winner of the Edgar Allan Poe Award—the most prestigious award for the mystery genre—Lori Roy has crafted a novel with both a twisty plot and emotional heft. I will admit…there were some tears shed while reading the final pages.

Addie Anne Buckley is about to turn eighteen and follow in her Aunt Jean’s footsteps to Hollywood, and her boyfriend, Truitt Holt, is successfully running the local bolita lottery, when their lives crash into the Tampa Mafia, an obsessive photographer, and more than one dead body. They will be put into dangerous—potentially fatal—positions in order to save all they hold dear. Oh, and Addie’s Aunt Jean? She’s also known by the name Marilyn Monroe.

Lake County is a truly mesmerizing read from one of the most acclaimed mystery writers working today. New York Times bestselling author Ace Atkins might have said it best in his praise for Lake County: “James M. Cain meets Harper Lee.”

—Liz Pearsons, Editor
4.0 out of 5 stars
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Thriller

4.0 out of 5 stars (100)
£0.99 (Save £2.00)
Family history has a funny way of repeating itself. My next-door neighbor is a third-generation plumber, part of a proud business that his family has grown from the ground up. A family friend found himself relocating to Scotland only to learn years later he had somehow, unbeknownst to him, settled in the same town in which his great-grandparents had met and fallen in love.

But in the case of twin sisters May and June of Paula Gleeson’s
Original Twin, the shared history is not so idyllic. At nineteen years old, June went missing. As May soon finds out, their mother went missing at the same age. Their mother, however, returned home to raise her family.

It’s been a year since anyone has seen June. May knows that it’s more than an unfortunate coincidence. She knows this because June left her clues pointing to a buried family secret and because no one knows June like May does. But May has secrets, too…even some she’s never told June.

Original Twin had me questioning why we so often repeat our family history. Is it destiny? Or do we somehow manifest long-heard stories as our own realities? Twisting and surprising, Paula Gleeson’s new novel calls into question the gap between the truth and family lore.

—Jessica Tribble Wells, Editor
Kindle Unlimited members can read most previous First Reads editors’ picks free.
Not a Kindle Unlimited member? Join now.