Amazon has some of the best novels on Literature and Fictions that you can read free of cost!!
Burial Ground: A Novel by Michael McBride:
When the body of Hunter Gearhardt washes up on the banks of a seasonal river outside of Pomacochas, Peru, with only samples of vegetation, a handful of feathers, two black- and gray-streaked rocks, and a golden headdress of indeterminate origin in his possession, his grieving father launches an expedition to determine how his son died. The party uses these clues to divine Hunter’s route into the jungle, where they find a surviving offshoot of a primitive tribe, long thought to be extinct, and something far more sinister, something that’s been able to avoid discovery for eons for one simple reason: No one leaves the rainforest alive.
Deceptive Cadence (The Conor McBride Series) by Kathryn Guare:
Readers who love “thrillers with heart” will find everything they’re looking for in this award-winning book – the first in a new suspense series.
What She Really Wants by Barbara Delinsky:
Is it really the thought that counts? Sarah Markham loves her husband Tom. They’ve been married for eighteen happy years, but on some level, she worries that he doesn’t see her as she really is. And nowhere is this more evident than in his gift giving. It’s not for any lack of love–Tom adores Sarah and spends lavishly–but he never quite surprises her with the perfect something. Enough. This year, when their anniversary rolls around, Sarah tells him, “I want you to think and to look at me and to see who I really am and what I really want.”
The Last Safe Place: A Novel by Ninie Hammon:
In the deepest, darkest midnight of her soul, an acclaimed poet abandons the lyric beauty that feeds her spirit to lash out at life and the world with contemporary fiction.
Colony of the Lost by Derik Cavignano:
Nestled in the heart of the Berkshires, among the sprawling expanse of wooded hills and scenic vistas, lies Glenwood, Massachusetts–the perfect picture of suburbia. But when the children of this affluent town begin vanishing one by one, baffling local and federal authorities alike, Glenwood becomes anything but a utopia.