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Chloe Butterworth has quite a nice life, thank you very much—a little cottage, a little girl, and a more than okay existence. Then her mother dies, and she is confronted with what to do about the old family holiday home and a rather large amount of debt. A chance reading of a two-year-old magazine article at a motorway services station sends her on a journey to a different chapter: a new adventure in a tiny coastal town called Pretty Beach. 🌸
Chloe and her daughter Ivy move into the old holiday house with its huge garden and tumbledown greenhouses, and she throws herself into what she privately suspects is a ludicrous idea. It turns out swimmingly. She only wishes she had taken the plunge sooner—head in the flower beds, her new adventure going rather well, her heart most definitely not looking for love. Along comes Lando Jones, and for once in her life, Chloe is taken completely by surprise. 💛
Polly Babbington writes the Pretty Beach Flower Farm series with the coastal English charm and gentle romantic warmth that has made her one of the most beloved authors in British cozy romance. The flower farm setting gives this series its particular sensory pleasure—the specific beauty of cut flowers, working greenhouses, and a garden reclaimed from neglect—alongside the small-town community and second-chance-at-life premise that Babbington handles with such consistent, unhurried grace. Readers who have followed her Darling Island and Pretty Beach worlds will find this series an equally irresistible addition to the collection. 🌷
What makes this irresistible: Polly Babbington launches the Pretty Beach Flower Farm series with a cozy coastal romance of pure charm—a widow with debt, a holiday house with tumbledown greenhouses, a ludicrous idea that goes swimmingly, and a man who arrives just when her heart had decided it was not looking. 🌟
Charley owns the family bakery and trusts recipes, not legends. Dylan is a hometown firefighter and her best friend. Kissing him at sunset was supposed to be harmless—a moment between friends, nothing more, the kind of thing that two people who know each other that well can laugh off the next morning. It was not harmless. It was not the kind of thing that gets laughed off. And Miracle Bay, which has its own quiet opinions about such matters, is not going to let either of them pretend otherwise. 💛
The friends-to-lovers premise operates here with the magical realism backdrop that gives the Miracle Bay series its particular atmospheric flavor—a neighborhood that believes in something, where certain things happen at sunset and certain kisses land differently than they should, and where pretending is significantly harder than it would be anywhere else. Charley’s reliance on recipes and reliable outcomes is exactly the kind of worldview that an accidental kiss in a neighborhood like Miracle Bay is designed to dismantle. 🌊
Heatherly Bell—the author of multiple beloved contemporary romance series including the Starlight Hill and Charming, Texas books—writes the friends-to-lovers transition with the warmth and earned emotional payoff that her readership comes to her for. The bakery setting, the firefighter hero, the magical town backdrop, and the central question of whether safety is worth choosing over the terrifying possibility of something real give the Miracle Bay series its opening premise and its emotional stakes. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Heatherly Bell launches the Miracle Bay series with a friends-to-lovers romance of genuine warmth—a baker who trusts recipes over legends, her firefighter best friend, one accidental sunset kiss that was supposed to be harmless, and a neighborhood that has its own quiet way of making pretending impossible. 🌟
Lights out. Keep still. Pray for morning. Joule and Cage Mazur feel like prisoners in their own home—something new is stalking the streets after dark, and their family’s only protection is bolting the door and embracing the darkness until daylight makes the world temporarily safe again. Even when they manage to trap and kill one of the monsters, they know their locks will not hold forever. The night hunters are picking off everyone they can reach, and the math is running against humanity. 💀
Dealing with rising panic and rage in the neighborhood, the two free-spirited survivors begin hatching a plan to undermine the killers rather than simply endure them. Joule and Cage know that time is ticking toward something that looks very much like extinction—and that surviving individually, household by household, is not a long-term solution when the night hunters are organized and patient and apparently inexhaustible. The question the Black Carbon series builds from is the one all effective survival horror fiction uses: can the hunted become the hunters before the balance tips permanently? ⚡
A.J. Scudiere writes the Black Carbon series with the dystopian action adventure momentum and sibling dynamic that have built the series a devoted readership among readers who want their post-apocalyptic fiction fast-paced and character-driven simultaneously. The night hunter premise is rendered with enough specificity to generate genuine dread, and Joule and Cage’s relationship gives the survival narrative its emotional grounding. 🌑
What makes this gripping: A.J. Scudiere launches the Black Carbon series with a dystopian survival thriller of relentless momentum—two siblings bolting their doors against something that hunts in darkness, managing to kill one monster but knowing the locks won’t hold, and hatching a plan to reclaim the top of the food chain before time runs out. 🌟
After decades of searching for her missing son, Maisie finally returns to Beach Cove—the quaint seaside village where time seems to stand still, her old beach house full of secrets and memories is waiting, and the friends she left behind have been holding her place in the community she once called home. The cobblestone streets and cozy cafes are exactly as she remembers. The friends are older and deeper, which is what time does to the people who matter. 🌊
Maisie reconnects with the community that shaped her: a fishmonger with a heart as vast as the ocean, a bookseller who believes in the magic of every story, a teacher whose wisdom reaches beyond textbooks. As she settles back in, she discovers that friendship weathers storms in ways that other bonds cannot, and that true connections deepen with time rather than fraying under the weight of it. Returning home means facing the past too—the bittersweet memories of her son, the dreams she once carried, the grief that waited for her. 💛
Nellie Brooks writes the Beach Cove series with the seaside friendship fiction warmth and emotional intelligence that the genre rewards when it takes its characters seriously—Maisie’s decades-long search gives the return-home narrative its specific gravity, and the community she finds waiting gives it its healing. The Beach Cove world is one of those cozy seaside settings that readers do not want to leave, populated with characters whose specific warmth makes the village feel genuinely inhabited. 🌿
What makes this heartwarming: Nellie Brooks launches the Beach Cove series with a seaside friendship fiction of gentle, profound warmth—a woman returning after decades of searching for her missing son, an old beach house full of memories, and the friends who kept her place in a community that has been waiting to welcome her home. 🌟
Vivien Wells never wanted a Prince Charming—she was perfectly happy kissing frogs with no expectation of transformation. But after watching all three of her sisters find true love, she has decided it is time to find her own happily-ever-after. Life, she quickly discovers, is considerably less cooperative than a fairytale. Her search is not going quite the way she planned. 💛
Glenn Maguire has taken himself off the market since becoming a single dad—the only female in his life that matters is his daughter Aubrey, and he made a deliberate decision not to bring a string of women through her life. He has kept to that decision. Then he gets to Hope Falls and meets his curvy, sassy, Jessica Rabbit look-alike neighbor, and his resolve faces its most serious test yet. The timing is, by any reasonable assessment, terrible. The attraction is, by any reasonable assessment, not going away. 😄
Melanie Shawn writes the Hope Falls: Brewed Awakenings series with the small-town warmth and romantic comedy timing that has made her one of the genre’s most beloved authors across multiple interconnected series. Vivien’s determined-but-hapless search for love and Glenn’s principled-but-challenged resolve give the fourth Brewed Awakenings installment its dual-perspective comedy alongside its genuine romantic heat. The Hope Falls community gives the series its world, and the specific pleasures of watching two people find excellent reasons not to do exactly what they both want to do give this entry its entertainment. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Melanie Shawn delivers a Hope Falls romantic comedy of pure warmth and wit—a woman determined to find her happily-ever-after after watching all three sisters find theirs, a single dad who swore off dating for his daughter’s sake, and a neighborly situation that is testing every one of his good intentions. 🌟
While helping an elderly friend in a sleepy North Carolina mountain town, Avery and her butterfly-loving dog Chevy make a discovery that shocks the entire community: a dead body. The town was not supposed to be the kind of place where this happens. When Avery realizes the dead man is the very person who got her fired, she understands immediately that she has landed in the middle of something considerably more complicated than a coincidence. 🐾
The Avery Barks Dog Mysteries series builds its central premise on the specific cozy mystery pleasure that a canine sleuthing partner generates—Chevy’s butterfly obsession and general dog enthusiasm providing the warmth and comic relief that keeps the dead bodies from weighing too heavily on the tone, while Avery’s personal connection to the victim gives the investigation its stakes beyond pure puzzle-solving. The North Carolina mountain setting gives the series its atmospheric backdrop: small, close-knit, full of the kinds of community secrets that make amateur investigation both necessary and fraught. 🔍
Mary Hiker delivers ten full novels in this free collection—an exceptional value that gives readers the complete opening run of the Avery and Chevy partnership across a full narrative arc. For readers who want their cozy mystery animal companions and their mountain small-town settings and their amateur sleuths with personal complications all in one package, the Avery Barks box set delivers the full experience. The ten-book format allows the community of characters and the central partnership to develop across a proper series arc. 💛
What makes this essential: Mary Hiker delivers all ten Avery Barks Dog Mystery novels in one free collection—a North Carolina mountain town, a butterfly-loving dog named Chevy, a dead body that turns out to be the man who got Avery fired, and ten full novels of small-town sleuthing with a canine partner. 🌟
A New Beginning: A Millie the Miracle Cat Cozy Mystery
Olivia Sutton moves to Timber Falls—a little mountain town hidden in Colorado—with a plan and some hard-earned savings, determined to start fresh and leave her past firmly in the rearview mirror. She is scouting locations for a new bookstore when she discovers two things simultaneously: a bedraggled stray cat, and something far more sinister. Starting over, it turns out, is not quite as straightforward as she had planned. 🐱
The question of whether the people of her newly claimed hometown will believe she is innocent is urgent and immediate. So is the question of whether she is losing her grip on reality—or whether her new cat is actually capable of the strange things that seem to be happening around her. Millie the Miracle Cat is not an ordinary stray, and the mystery surrounding the sinister thing Olivia discovered is not one she is going to be able to solve without help from a source she did not expect. 🔍
Courtney McFarlin writes the Millie the Miracle Cat series with the Colorado mountain town setting and cozy feline mystery warmth that distinguishes the series within the crowded animal cozy mystery space—Millie’s particular brand of miraculous is specific enough to give the series its world-building hook while remaining cozy in tone rather than tipping into paranormal. The bookstore dream gives Olivia her fresh-start motivation, and the murder investigation gives her an immediate reason to stay and fight for the life she is trying to build. 💛
What makes this charming: Courtney McFarlin launches the Millie the Miracle Cat series with a Colorado mountain cozy mystery of genuine warmth—a woman starting fresh who discovers a stray cat and something far more sinister while scouting bookstore locations, and a hometown that needs to decide whether to believe her before she can truly begin again. 🌟
Ellie Eaton and Brady Jackson were never supposed to fall in love—their families made sure of that, with rules and grudges that split not just them but their entire hometown. Despite the warnings and the fallout they knew was coming, Ellie and Brady forged a forbidden friendship that blossomed into a once-in-a-lifetime romance. Then, just as they were ready to leave for college and start a life together, everything fell apart. Illness, deception, and long-buried secrets tore them apart, and silence moved in where the love had been. 💔
Ten years later, a near tragedy brings them back to the town that once drove them apart—and back to each other, with old wounds still tender and the love between them refusing to stay quiet. This time they are not alone: unlikely allies have emerged on both sides, rooting for the reunion that everyone who knows them can see is inevitable. But not everyone is happy to see them back together, and the forces that separated them the first time are not necessarily finished. 💛
Jennifer Peel writes small-town second-chance romance with the emotional intelligence and community texture that distinguishes her work—the family grudge backdrop gives the forbidden love its specific weight, and the decade of separation gives the reunion its bittersweet complexity. The Rules We Broke delivers the second-chance romance at its most emotionally satisfying, with the small-town setting providing both the obstacles and the warmth that define the genre. ⚡
What makes this unforgettable: Jennifer Peel delivers a small-town second-chance romance of genuine emotional depth—a forbidden love torn apart by illness, deception, and family grudges, ten years of silence, and a near tragedy that brings them back to the town and each other, with old love refusing to stay buried. 🌟
Maggie and John are finally on their long-overdue Connecticut vacation when a forest fire engulfs the region, and they swing into action to rescue animals—forging human bonds in the process that extend far beyond the crisis itself. It is exactly the kind of moment that the Rosemont series has always built its emotional architecture around: ordinary people finding extraordinary reserves of compassion when circumstances demand it. 🌿
Back in Westbury, Maggie faces a firestorm of a different kind. Vindictive social media posts about her late husband’s shady past are threatening her reputation, and her response to them—forceful, direct, perhaps more forceful than is entirely wise—may ruffle feathers or upend her career entirely. Gordon Mortimer returns to Westbury to continue appraising Rosemont’s treasures, and a meeting with the owner of a local bridal boutique over her vintage sewing machine collection sparks an attraction that goes considerably beyond their shared interest in antiques. 💛
Barbara Hinske writes the tenth Rosemont installment with the women’s fiction warmth and multi-threaded narrative that has made the series one of its genre’s most beloved long-running sagas—resilience, love, and the power of compassion woven through storylines that reward readers who have followed the Westbury community from the beginning while remaining accessible to those arriving at book ten with fresh eyes. 🌅
What makes this essential: Barbara Hinske delivers the tenth Rosemont novel with the series’ established warmth and multi-threaded emotional richness—a forest fire rescue that forges unexpected bonds, a social media threat to Maggie’s reputation, and a new attraction blooming over vintage sewing machines in a Westbury bridal boutique. 🌟
Xander Corey lives simply and sustainably on the outskirts of Osprey, a small quaint town in Upstate New York. He is a librarian when the town’s budget can afford him, a good friend, a kind neighbor, and—of no particular concern to anyone around him—a witch. He knows something dark and dangerous is brewing around his family land, with non-human entities taking an unsettling interest in what his family has held for generations. He is just not sure yet what. 🌲
The new chief of police is giving him heart palpitations and homicidal thoughts simultaneously, which is a specific kind of problem. Xander cannot decide whether the gorgeous yet infuriating Lorne MacBain is on his side or simply trying to drive him insane. Added to that, Lorne does not believe in magic—and since that is fundamentally who Xander is, their future looks anything but bright. Except that Lorne is not the unimaginative stick-in-the-mud Xander thinks he is, and a steady anchor is exactly what someone whose life is turning upside down most urgently needs. 💛
Mary Calmes writes the Raven of the Woods series with the MM paranormal romance character warmth and witchy small-town atmosphere that her readership loves—Xander’s voice is sharp and self-aware, the Osprey setting is rendered with genuine cozy community texture, and the brewing supernatural threat gives the series its external pressure alongside the central romance. ⚡
What makes this captivating: Mary Calmes launches the Raven of the Woods series with an MM paranormal romance of genuine wit and warmth—a small-town witch librarian, a gorgeous new police chief who does not believe in magic, something dark gathering around the family land, and two people who drive each other insane discovering they need each other to survive it. 🌟
A young boy has disappeared. DCI Michael Yorke’s small town is in the grip of a destructive snowstorm, and the investigation that should be straightforward is anything but. The missing boy has connections to the Rays—a deranged family whose history is steeped in violence—and as Yorke follows the threads deeper into what the family actually is and what they are capable of, the darkness he encounters is not the kind that resolves cleanly into procedural clarity. 💀
When all seems lost, Yorke refuses to give in. He journeys deep into the heart of the sinister family for the truth, and what he discovers there will tear his world apart. The noir crime register of One Last Prayer gives the DCI Yorke series its particular atmosphere—this is not the cozy British procedural but the darker end of British crime fiction, where the detective’s body and soul are both genuinely at risk and where the evil being investigated is rendered without the softening that more mainstream procedurals apply. ⚡
Wes Markin writes with the atmospheric tension and moral weight that distinguishes noir crime at its most effective—the snowstorm setting creating the isolation that the Rays’ specific brand of violence requires, and Yorke’s relentless refusal to look away giving the novel its moral center. The DCI Yorke series has built its readership on exactly this combination: a detective who cannot stop, and cases that would justify stopping. 🔍
What makes this gripping: Wes Markin launches the DCI Michael Yorke series with a noir crime thriller of genuine darkness—a missing boy, a snowstorm, a deranged family whose history of violence runs deeper than anyone on the outside has understood, and a detective who journeys into the heart of it and discovers something that tears his world apart. 🌟
Merit was doing fine as a graduate student—not glamorous, but hers—until a rogue vampire attacked her. He only got a sip before another vampire scared him off, and this second one decided the best way to save her life was to make her the walking undead. Her savior was Ethan Sullivan, the master vampire of Cadogan House: tall, green-eyed, four hundred years old, and possessed of centuries’ worth of charm alongside the expectation that she will be appropriately grateful and suitably obedient. 💀
Merit has traded sweating over her thesis for learning to fit into a Hyde Park mansion full of vampires loyal to Ethan Lord of the Manor Sullivan. The sunlight allergy is inconvenient. His attitude is considerably more so. And someone is still trying to kill her—which means her initiation into Chicago’s nightlife may be the first skirmish of something considerably larger and bloodier than a single rogue attack. The Chicagoland Vampires series begins here, with Merit’s new existence in full chaotic bloom. 🌙
Chloe Neill writes the Chicagoland Vampires series with the urban fantasy wit and character chemistry that has made it one of the genre’s most beloved long-running franchises—Merit’s voice is sharp, self-aware, and deeply reluctant about her situation, and Ethan’s particular brand of insufferable authority is exactly the right foil for it. The Chicago setting gives the series its gritty urban texture. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Chloe Neill launches the Chicagoland Vampires series with a paranormal vampire romance of sharp wit and genuine heat—a graduate student turned vampire against her will by a four-hundred-year-old master who expects gratitude, someone still trying to kill her, and an initiation into Chicago’s vampire world that is only the opening move. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











