Wilde and witchy in combination suggests a heroine who is both untamed and magically gifted, and Daigle Rae Humphrey builds her series opener around a protagonist whose magical destiny arrives at a moment she wasn’t necessarily prepared for it, bringing complications she didn’t ask for alongside the power she didn’t know she had. The destined of the title signals a romance and a magical awakening that were always coming. 🔮
Humphrey writes paranormal romance with an emphasis on the discovery arc, the process of a protagonist learning what she is and what she’s capable of, which gives the series opener natural momentum as each new magical revelation reshapes both the world and the romance at its center. The wilde energy of the series title promises a heroine who won’t be easily contained by either her magic or her feelings. 🌿
Readers who enjoy paranormal romance with a strong magical awakening premise and a heroine whose wildness is as much a character trait as her powers will find this a lively and engaging series opener.
Why this entices: it pairs a magical destiny with a protagonist whose wild nature means she’ll never simply accept what she’s been told about either her powers or her heart.
Baseball romance has a particular appeal built into its setting, the long season, the travel, the superstitions, and the specific culture of a locker room, and Aven Ellis uses all of it to give the Washington DC Soaring Eagles series opener its distinctive flavor. Squeeze Play pairs the sport’s terminology with the romantic pressure of two people whose professional proximity keeps eliminating the comfortable distance between them. ⚾
Ellis writes sports romance with genuine warmth and a comic sensibility, giving her characters enough personality outside the baseball context to make the romance feel specific rather than generic. The DC setting adds a political backdrop to the sports world that gives the series a distinctive geographic identity alongside its athletic one. 💕
Readers who enjoy sports romance with genuine baseball atmosphere, a light comedic tone, and a series built around a compelling team rather than just a central couple will find Ellis’s Soaring Eagles a fun and satisfying series start.
Why this charms: it wraps a warm, funny romance around the specific rhythms of professional baseball, using the sport’s long season and close-quarters culture to keep two people in exactly the right kind of unavoidable proximity.
The harvesting of the title carries agricultural and supernatural resonance simultaneously, and Melanie Karsak builds her series opener around exactly that dual implication, following a protagonist pulled back to her small hometown by visions and instincts she can’t explain, arriving just as the world begins coming apart in ways that require more than ordinary survival skills to navigate. 🌾
Karsak blends post-apocalyptic survival with paranormal elements in a way that gives the series a distinctive flavor within both genres, neither purely apocalyptic nor purely fantasy but something that uses both registers to build a world where the supernatural has always been present and becomes urgently relevant when everything else collapses. 🌑
Readers who enjoy post-apocalyptic fiction with strong paranormal elements and a heroine whose connection to the supernatural is central to both her survival and the series’ mythology will find Karsak’s opener an intriguing blend of genres.
Why this compels: it blends post-apocalyptic survival with paranormal mythology in a way that makes both elements feel essential rather than decorative, anchored by a protagonist whose supernatural gifts are exactly the thing the collapsing world needs.
Friends of Dorothy
Friends of Dorothy is a phrase with a long history as a coded signal within LGBTQ communities, and Sandi Toksvig, the Danish-British comedian, writer, and activist, builds her novel around that phrase’s resonance, using it to anchor a story about identity, chosen family, and the particular solidarity that comes from recognizing someone else as one of your own. 🌈
Toksvig writes with the wit and warmth that have made her one of Britain’s most beloved public figures, giving the novel a light comic touch that never trivializes the real emotional stakes underneath it. The Wizard of Oz allusion embedded in the title carries its own freight of camp, longing, and the dream of a place where you finally belong, all of which the novel explores with genuine affection. 📖
Readers who enjoy LGBTQ fiction with strong community themes, a warm comic sensibility, and a writer who clearly loves her subject matter will find Toksvig a thoroughly enjoyable guide.
Why this warms: it takes a phrase with decades of coded meaning in LGBTQ history and builds a story around exactly what it has always really pointed toward, the radical comfort of being recognized and welcomed by your own people.
Three of paranormal romance’s most established names contribute original stories to this anthology, each bringing their distinctive voice to the lone wolf premise, the alpha figure who operates outside the pack and finds, inevitably, someone who changes that calculation. Diana Palmer, Kate Pearce, and Rebecca Zanetti represent decades of combined experience in the genre, and the anthology format lets each deliver a complete, satisfying story within their individual series worlds. 🐺
The value here is threefold, longtime fans of any of these authors get new material in their preferred voice, while readers new to one or two of them get an efficient sampler that might send them toward a new series to binge. The lone wolf framing gives all three stories a loose thematic coherence without requiring them to share a world or continuity. 🌑
Readers who enjoy paranormal romance with shifter dynamics and want a single purchase that delivers three complete stories from three reliable authors will find this an excellent value.
Why this satisfies: it puts three of paranormal romance’s most reliable names in one collection and lets each deliver a complete lone-wolf story in their own established voice, which is genuinely hard to argue with as a value proposition.
Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus represent one of sport’s great rivalries, built not on hatred but on the more interesting dynamic of mutual respect between two men who each made the other better and whose competition shaped an entire era of golf. Ian O’Connor reconstructs that rivalry with the narrative skill and reporting depth that the subject deserves. ⛳
O’Connor traces how Palmer’s charismatic everyman appeal and Nicklaus’s cold, methodical excellence played off each other across decades, how the young Nicklaus displaced Palmer as the dominant figure in the sport, and how that transition generated both genuine tension and eventual genuine friendship. The book treats golf’s history as a lens into broader American culture without losing sight of the sport itself. 🏆
Readers who love sports history or are interested in the golden age of professional golf will find O’Connor’s dual biography a well-paced, thoroughly researched account of one of the game’s defining relationships.
Why this endures: it tells the story of golf’s greatest rivalry not as a tale of animosity but as something more interesting, two extraordinary competitors who made each other better and the sport bigger than either could have done alone.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





