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Emmy is all sorts of okay with her life—which is, if she is being honest with herself, about as good as it gets. Then one day on a trip to Darling Island in search of the perfect birthday cake, her okay life takes a turn she definitely hadn’t seen coming. Staring at a dilapidated old shop as gorgeous vintage trams rumble past and the sun shines off a glittering sea, Emmy feels something tug at her heartstrings hard enough that she does the impulsive thing and sinks just about everything she has into a completely new way of life. 🌊
Darling Island—perched on the edge of the English coast where the old ferry crosses a shimmering sea—is the kind of place that gets into people in ways they cannot fully account for, and that is precisely what it does to Emmy. The novel follows her not just as she renovates the old shop and dips her toe into a new world, but as Darling wraps her up in its particular charms and peels back the layers of her heart in the process. The second chance at love the series promises arrives with the warmth and unhurried pace that Polly Babbington’s writing consistently delivers. 💛
Babbington has built a devoted readership across the Darling Island series precisely because she understands that the best escapist romance is not just about the love story but about the place—the specific quality of light and community and old buildings that makes a reader want to move there alongside the protagonist. The Old Ticket Office gives both its setting and its central character the time they need to become genuinely compelling, which is the particular charm that distinguishes the series within the cozy British romance genre. 🏡
What makes this irresistible: Polly Babbington delivers a Darling Island romance of pure escapist warmth—a woman whose okay life takes an impulsive turn when a dilapidated old English seaside shop steals her heart, and a sparkling island community that has a way of giving people exactly what they didn’t know they needed. 🌟
Reyna and Dallin are perfect for each other—she is a romance author inspired by his alpha male energy, he is Nashville’s hottest tattoo artist drawn to the girl next door who is a blank canvas for his world, and the two years they have been together have been exactly as satisfying as the premise suggests. Then Dallin’s childhood best friends show up on the doorstep, and the script on everything Reyna thought she knew about intimacy gets flipped entirely. 🔥
Trey and Parker are, objectively, the hottest men Reyna has ever seen—besides Dallin, of course. Her initial embarrassment at finding herself responding to them in front of her boyfriend gives way quickly when Dallin makes clear that he does not mind at all. In fact, he wants to share her with both of them—which is the specific moment where Twisted Ink announces itself as a reverse harem romance with the particular dynamic that the subgenre delivers at its most unapologetic. For readers already familiar with the format, the Nashville tattoo world setting and the romance-author protagonist give this entry its distinguishing flavor. 💛
A.M. McCoy writes the Beauty in the Ink series with the heat and character chemistry that the reverse harem romance requires—a heroine whose professional immersion in romantic fantasy makes her response to the situation feel both ironic and earned, and three men whose dynamic with each other is as important to the series as the central romantic arrangement. The Beauty in the Ink world rewards readers who follow the full series, and Twisted Ink establishes it with enough world-building and character warmth to make the longer commitment feel worthwhile. ⚡
What makes this compelling: A.M. McCoy launches the Beauty in the Ink series with a Nashville reverse harem romance of genuine heat—a romance author, her tattoo artist boyfriend, two devastatingly attractive childhood friends, and an arrangement nobody planned for that changes everything about what Reyna thought she knew about desire. 🌟
Claire McBride is a lawyer dedicated to justice who receives devastating news: her cancer has returned, and this time it is terminal. Rather than accept her diminishing days passively, she decides to use the time she has left for something specific—punishing those from her past who have escaped the law and who she has spent her career failing to reach through conventional means. Her diagnosis has, in its terrible way, set her free. 💀
Dr. Issy Moran, Claire’s narcissistic consultant, has been conducting her own parallel program of judgment for years—playing executioner with patients she has privately decided are unworthy, and doing so with the impunity that comes from a position of medical authority. When Claire’s diagnosis lands, Issy sees it as her opportunity for a different kind of revenge, one that has been building for years. The novel sets these two women on a collision course in Cornwall’s shadows, each running her own twisted game and each holding a different kind of power. 🔍
Julie Evans constructs the psychological cat-and-mouse dynamic with the Cornish setting giving it its atmospheric texture—a landscape that combines coastal beauty with the sense of isolation that crime fiction uses most effectively when the danger is intimate rather than institutional. The central question the novel poses—when revenge becomes a terminal game, who actually holds power over life and death—is worked out with the genuine moral complexity that distinguishes the best British crime thriller from simple procedural. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Julie Evans delivers a Cornish crime thriller of genuine psychological tension—a terminally ill lawyer using her final days to deliver justice the courts denied, a doctor who has been quietly executing her own verdicts for years, and a collision between two women who each believe they hold the power to decide who lives. 🌟
After the death of her husband Wilson, Elise Mitchell finds herself trapped under the strict command of her controlling mother-in-law—a woman who holds the money Wilson left behind and is now fighting Elise for guardianship of her own son Bailey. The situation is untenable, and Elise knows it. When she stumbles across an advertisement for a lonely rancher seeking a mail-order bride, she sees it for what it is: a chance for both of them to get free. 🌾
Tom Greening of Eagle Creek never needed a wife and was entirely content with the bachelor cattle rancher life he had built. Then his housekeeper took it upon herself to advertise for a mail-order bride on his behalf without telling him—which is the kind of well-intentioned interference that the mail-order bride genre has always used to maximum effect. Tom’s discovery that a woman and her young son are already on their way to become his family is the collision point where the novel begins its central work. 💛
Karla Gracey writes the Eagle Creek Brides series with the inspirational romance warmth and frontier authenticity that the genre rewards when it is grounded in genuine character stakes. Elise’s situation—a widow fighting a controlling mother-in-law for her own son while searching for a way out—gives the novel its emotional urgency, and Tom’s principled response to an arrangement he did not choose gives it its romantic foundation. The faith elements are woven through naturally rather than imposed, and the Eagle Creek community gives the series its setting depth. 🌅
What makes this heartwarming: Karla Gracey launches the Eagle Creek Brides series with an inspirational mail-order bride romance of genuine heart—a widow escaping a controlling mother-in-law with her young son, a bachelor rancher who had no idea his housekeeper had advertised for a bride, and a fresh start neither of them planned for. 🌟
The recipe is simple and results are guaranteed: one devastatingly handsome Scottsdale police detective, one outrageously sexy female investigator who only wants to save the world, the gorgeous bad boy of the local crime family, a murder, a pocketful of diamonds, and a handful of Russian mobsters. Mix thoroughly and you have Scottsdale Heat—a humorous mystery romance that takes the sun-drenched Arizona setting and populates it with exactly the kind of characters that make the genre irresistible at its most enjoyably chaotic. 😄
Laura Black is the investigator at the center of the series, and her particular combination of competence and magnetic attraction to trouble is what drives the Laura Black Mysteries across a long-running franchise. The Scottsdale setting gives the series its visual identity—desert glamour, wealth, crime, and the specific atmosphere of a city where legitimate and illegitimate money have been living alongside each other for long enough that the lines have blurred considerably. The Russian mobsters and the crime family bad boy signal that the trouble Laura attracts is not of the ordinary variety. 🔍
B.A. Trimmer writes the series with the light touch and comic timing that makes humorous mystery romance work when it is operating at its best—the danger is real enough to generate genuine stakes, the romance is warm enough to give readers something to root for, and the humor is consistent enough to keep the tone from ever tipping into anything heavier than the genre intends. Scottsdale Heat launches the Laura Black Mysteries with the character and setting establishment that has sustained the series across many subsequent installments. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: B.A. Trimmer launches the Laura Black Mysteries with a Scottsdale humorous mystery romance of guaranteed entertainment—a gorgeous detective, a crime family bad boy, Russian mobsters, a murder, a pocketful of diamonds, and an investigator who only wants to save the world but keeps landing in the middle of all of it. 🌟
Maya Anderson only knows success—set a goal, create a plan, achieve. Everything she can control, she does, right down to her color-coordinated closet. Then someone tries to kill her. Her new goal is simpler and more urgent than anything she has pursued before: stay alive. New town, new identity, no men. It is a decent three-step plan, until a run-in with a local detective with haunted green eyes leaves her vulnerable in ways that the plan did not account for. 💔
Mike Sheppard left his Colorado mountain hometown as a bruised, broken kid and swore he would never return. Twenty years later he is back, paying dues for the dead, building his career as the town’s newest detective with a specific mission: restore trust and honor to a department recovering from decades of corruption. He has built his life around protecting the vulnerable. He did not expect the vulnerable to arrive in quite this form, with quite this effect on his carefully maintained emotional distance. 💛
Terreece M. Clarke writes the Courageous Love Series with the emotional depth and romantic suspense momentum that makes the enemies-to-lovers format particularly effective when both protagonists are carrying genuine damage—Maya’s controlled competence as a trauma response, Mike’s self-imposed isolation as one. The ruthlessness of one man’s obsession gives the series its external danger, and the courage required to be vulnerable after devastating life events gives it its internal one. Heartbeat launches the series with the character complexity and sustained tension that rewards readers who follow the arc. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Terreece M. Clarke launches the Courageous Love Series with a romantic suspense of genuine emotional depth—a woman whose entire life is about control until someone tries to kill her, a haunted detective trying to restore honor to a corrupt department, and a connection neither of them can afford and neither can avoid. 🌟
David and Goliath
The David and Goliath story is one of the most famous underdog narratives in human history, and Malcolm Gladwell’s argument is that most people have been misreading it for three thousand years. David was not supposed to lose—and understanding why changes how we think about obstacles, disadvantages, and the things we have been calling weaknesses. The shepherd boy with a sling was not the underdog the story appears to present. He was, in a very specific tactical sense, the favorite. 💡
From that reinterpretation, Gladwell builds his characteristic intellectual adventure across history, psychology, and current events—Northern Ireland’s Troubles, cancer researchers, civil rights leaders, the dynamics of successful and unsuccessful classrooms, murder and the costs of revenge. The connecting thread is a challenge to conventional thinking about what constitutes an advantage and what constitutes a setback: disability, loss, discrimination, attending a mediocre school. Much of what looks like suffering, Gladwell argues, contains the seeds of something beautiful and important that straightforward advantage does not produce. 📖
Gladwell—the host of Revisionist History and the author of Outliers, Blink, and The Tipping Point—writes with the accessible narrative intelligence and counterintuitive provocation that has made him one of the most widely read nonfiction writers of the past twenty-five years. David and Goliath delivers the Gladwellian formula at full power: a famous story completely reframed, then extended through case studies that keep reframing what readers thought they understood about success and failure. 🌟
What makes this essential: Malcolm Gladwell delivers a dazzling reexamination of underdogs, giants, and the role of adversity—beginning with the argument that David was never supposed to lose, then extending it through civil rights leaders, cancer researchers, and the counterintuitive truth that apparent disadvantages often contain hidden power. 🌟
Music journalist Fern Talbot has just inherited a dusty antique shop from a great-aunt she never knew—along with a letter informing her she is the sole beneficiary of an eccentric woman’s estate on Puffin Island. Her plan is entirely sensible: get in, sell it, and get out. Puffin Island is not where her life is. It is not going to capture her heart. This is not going to become a story about a devoted city girl discovering that she belongs somewhere she never expected. 😄
Except that her charming lodger turns out to be the man from the train—the meet-cute she had written off as a pleasant memory—and then a tantalising mystery wrapped up in a vintage wedding dress demands to be solved, and Puffin Island turns out to be exactly the kind of place that captures devoted city girls’ hearts against all their better intentions. Christie Barlow writes with the warmth and comic timing that has made her one of British humorous fiction’s most beloved authors, and the Curiosity Lane setting delivers the specific combination of community, mystery, and coastal charm that her readership comes to her for. 💛
The vintage wedding dress mystery gives the novel its forward momentum alongside the romance—a story within the story that needs solving and that connects the island’s past to Fern’s increasingly complicated present. The inherited shop that was supposed to be a quick transaction becoming the center of a life Fern didn’t know she wanted is handled with the lightness and genuine feeling that Barlow manages consistently. 🌿
What makes this irresistible: Christie Barlow delivers a Puffin Island humorous romance of pure charm—a music journalist who inherits a dusty antique shop she plans to sell immediately, a lodger who turns out to be her train meet-cute, and a mystery in a vintage wedding dress that makes leaving considerably harder than planned. 🌟
In 1955, Pen Turner inherits a bookshop in the Scottish town of Helensburgh and finds, nestled among its dusty shelves alongside hundreds of old books, something considerably rarer—an artifact once created by the occultist John Dee that begins to stir the edges of reality. In 1989, Adelaide Benson returns to Scotland after her husband leaves her, drawn to an old abandoned bookshop near her eccentric great aunt’s apothecary and the secrets hidden within its walls. 🏴
Though separated by decades, Pen and Adelaide find themselves connected through an old typewriter hidden within the bookshop—one that allows them to communicate across time. What begins as curious correspondence deepens as letters and stories passed through the keys blur the boundaries between past and present, ink and emotion. Jessica Dodge writes the time-crossed connection with the patience it deserves, allowing the relationship to develop through the specific intimacy of written correspondence before the full weight of what they are doing to each other’s lives becomes apparent. 💛
The Messengers of Magic occupies the romantasy-adjacent space where historical fiction, time travel, and romance overlap—grounded enough in its Scottish settings to feel genuinely atmospheric, and sufficiently invested in the emotional logic of its impossible relationship to make readers care about a resolution that the premise itself makes structurally difficult. The John Dee artifact and the bookshop mystery give the novel its supernatural texture without overwhelming the human story at its center. ⚡
What makes this captivating: Jessica Dodge delivers a Scottish time travel romance of genuine atmospheric beauty—a 1955 man and a 1989 woman connected through a typewriter hidden in a Helensburgh bookshop, their letters blurring the boundary between past and present until their lives and hearts are irrevocably intertwined. 🌟
Margot Simpson abandoned her Broadway singing career to follow the man of her dreams to Burlington, Vermont, and never looked back. She embraced the role of wife, mother, and homemaker with an artist’s passion, and for years her husband was a dedicated partner and father. Then his political aspirations consumed him—a Senate seat became the focus of everything, and the people who matter most became peripheral. Margot was raised to roll up her sleeves and dance in the downpour. She does not run when it rains. 💛
The question the novel builds toward is when persistence becomes something else—when the effort to love someone back to the person they used to be tips over into something that costs the person doing the loving everything they have. Margot is convinced that if she loves her husband hard enough, he will awaken from the political dream he is trapped in. The gradual realization that it is her own awakening that is at stake gives the novel its particular emotional architecture. 💔
Boo Walker writes the Red Mountain Chronicles with the Vermont setting and literary fiction sensibility that distinguishes his work within commercial fiction—accessible and emotionally intelligent, grounded in the specific texture of a marriage rather than the dramatic outline of one. A Marriage Well Done asks the question that the best marriage fiction always asks: not whether love is enough, but what happens to a person who refuses to stop believing that it is. 🌅
What makes this compelling: Boo Walker delivers a Red Mountain Chronicles novel of genuine emotional depth—a former Broadway singer who gave up everything to be the perfect wife, a husband whose Senate ambitions have made his family invisible, and the slow dawning realization that loving someone harder is not the same as saving yourself. 🌟
Kurt Austin is injured while rescuing the passengers and crew of a sinking yacht—and when he wakes up, he has two conflicting sets of memories about what happened. Did he witness an old friend and her children drown, or was the yacht abandoned when he came aboard? He cannot trust either version of his own recollection, which is exactly the kind of problem that sets a NUMA Files thriller in motion: a mystery not just about what happened but about what Kurt himself is capable of knowing. 🌊
Determined to find the truth, he descends into a shadowy world of state-sponsored cybercrime—uncovering a pattern of suspicious accidents, vanishing scientists, and a web of human trafficking that connects the yacht incident to something considerably larger and more dangerous than a single maritime rescue gone wrong. The trail leads from Morocco to North Korea to the rugged coasts of Madagascar, with the sinister organization behind the conspiracy proving both resourceful and ruthless. 💀
Clive Cussler and Graham Brown write the NUMA Files series with the globe-trotting adventure momentum and technical detail that have made the Cussler franchise one of action thriller’s most enduring—Kurt Austin is a compelling series hero in the tradition of Dirk Pitt, and Ghost Ship delivers the underwater adventure, international intrigue, and propulsive pacing that the franchise’s readership reliably comes to it for. ⚡
What makes this propulsive: Clive Cussler and Graham Brown deliver a NUMA Files thriller of globe-spanning momentum—Kurt Austin waking with contradictory memories of a rescue, a trail of vanishing scientists and human trafficking from Morocco to North Korea, and a conspiracy whose full shape he could not have guessed when he pulled survivors from a sinking yacht. 🌟
After a career-changing interview following the big game, Emma runs into Jack Hale in a Vegas bar—her brother’s best friend, her first crush, and a sports agent whose biggest client is the country’s most popular football player. What begins as a meet-cute turns into a celebration. One night. One perfect night. Until the next morning when Jack’s famous client turns infamous and a scandal to end all scandals explodes into a media nightmare. 💛
Emma is the new darling of sports broadcasting. Jack needs her. Their worlds collide again—this time not in bed but in the middle of a crisis that puts a target on Emma’s back simply because she said yes to Jack. The Killers Next Generation series operates in the action-adventure romance space where personal danger and romantic tension develop simultaneously, and Brynne Asher handles the escalation with the pacing that keeps the thriller momentum running alongside the love story rather than treating them as separate tracks. ⚡
Asher writes with the found-family warmth and covert organization world-building that has given the Killers franchise its devoted following across multiple series arcs. The Playbook of Emma delivers the series’ established pleasures—competent heroes, genuine danger, and a romantic relationship forged under pressure—while introducing the next generation of characters with enough backstory to reward longtime readers and enough forward momentum to work as a standalone entry point. 🌟
What makes this propulsive: Brynne Asher launches The Killers Next Generation with an action romance of genuine heat and danger—a sports broadcaster and a sports agent whose one perfect Vegas night puts a target on her back when his client’s scandal explodes, and an old flame who may be the only person who can keep her alive. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











