Astoria Tempest has lived countless lives—none of them truly her own. Cursed with immortality and the ability to return the dead, she has spent over a century fleeing grief, guilt, and the compulsion she cannot suppress: the need to save the dying, even when she has no right to give them back. The scales tip decisively when she bargains her husband’s soul to save their daughter. That is when Death comes to collect everything she has stolen across more than a hundred years. 💀
Death is not a shadow or a scythe. He is a man—cold eyes, a sharper tongue, and a ledger with her name at the top. Astoria has been evading reckoning for decades, drifting through the years like a ghost, hiding in the cracks of time, nursing the compulsion that keeps getting her into trouble. When she intervenes one time too many, her quiet eternity begins to collapse around her. Out of options, she strikes the only deal available: one broken curse in exchange for one soul. Hers. 🌑
Rhea Rainwater builds the novel on the specific dark fantasy premise that rewards readers who want their immortality stories to actually grapple with the cost of living forever—the grief that accumulates, the guilt that compounds, the exhaustion of a person who keeps making the same impossible choice for reasons she cannot stop. The romance threading through the novel arrives in the form of the one entity she cannot outrun, which gives the relationship its particular tension: a woman who has been cheating death for a century, falling for Death himself. 🌹
What makes this compelling: Rhea Rainwater delivers a dark fantasy romance of genuine originality—an immortal woman who returns the dead and cannot stop, a Death who is a man with cold eyes and a ledger, and a deal that trades the only soul she has left for the chance to finally be free. 🌟
Criminal investigator Larry Macklin catches a case that begins with a mutilated corpse and connects, he suspects, to the smoldering ruins of an old home in his rural North Florida town. The arson case, however, belongs to an investigator who despises him—which means Larry is working around an institutional obstacle while trying to solve a murder. The additional complication is structural and personal: his boss is his father, and the relationship between them is anything but straightforward. 🔍
The investigation heats up as the motive begins pointing backward in time—toward a tight group of friends who were in high school together in the 1970s. Before Larry can work through the list of suspects, one of them is killed. The killer is targeting this specific group, which means the secret worth protecting is one they all share, buried deep enough in the past that decades of normal life have accumulated on top of it. The question is which secret, and whose hands it implicates. 💀
A. E. Howe builds the Larry Macklin Mysteries on the specific pleasures of small-town Florida crime fiction—a community where everyone’s history is visible and the past is never as finished as people prefer to believe. The father-son dynamic running through Larry’s professional life adds the kind of personal stakes that elevate procedural investigation beyond pure plot mechanics: a case that turns out to be buried in his father’s history means that solving it requires confronting things the sheriff would prefer stayed unexamined. Larry is running out of time. And the killer may have noticed. 🌿
What makes this gripping: A. E. Howe launches the Larry Macklin Mysteries with a North Florida crime thriller of genuine atmosphere—a mutilated corpse, a 1970s high school secret worth killing over decades later, and an investigator whose boss is his father and whose case keeps getting closer to home. 🌟
The first great war of Ovira is over. The most hated king in centuries is dead. His nephew Basen is still alive—exiled with his father to the territory of their enemies, doing manual labor just to eat, watching the dream of becoming a legendary mage recede further with every passing day. The war was not his fault. The exile was not his fault. None of that changes the circumstances he is living in. 🏰
The one viable path forward is an elite school that takes in a thousand young men and women each year, trains them, houses them, and feeds them. It is Basen’s only realistic chance at recovering anything resembling the life he was supposed to have. The determination he brings to earning a place there is real and hard-won—and will put him at the center of a conflict more dangerous and more costly than the war he narrowly survived. 💀
B.T. Narro builds the Kin of Kings series on the classic epic fantasy foundation of a young man with potential and obstacles, rendered with the political specificity that gives the world of Ovira its texture. The aftermath-of-war setting distinguishes the novel from the standard chosen-hero narrative: Basen is not special by prophecy but by persistence, navigating a world that was damaged by his uncle’s actions and holds that against him regardless. The school setting channels the tension between ambition and survival into a contained arena that escalates steadily toward the larger conflict the series is building toward. ⚔️
What makes this essential: B.T. Narro launches The Kin of Kings with an epic fantasy of genuine depth—an exiled nephew of the most hated king in history, a desperate bid to join an elite mage school, and a determination that will place him at the center of a war even more destructive than the one he barely escaped. 🌟
The Wedding Date Disaster
Gemma Evans has had a spectacular run of bad luck in a very short time. Passed over for a promotion she deserved. Forced to watch her work nemesis Ben McDonald take the Chief Editor position she had been building toward. And now she has a family wedding in Italy approaching and no date to attend it with. Showing up alone is not an option she is willing to consider, so she asks a friend to help her find someone. The blind date her friend arranges turns out to be her worst nightmare—which is saying something, given the week she has already had. 🇮🇹
The enemies-to-lovers setup in a destination wedding context is one of romantic comedy’s most reliable structural pleasures, and The Wedding Date Disaster deploys it with the warmth and comic momentum that makes the format work. Italy—sun, family, wine, and the specific pressure of a formal occasion where everyone is watching and asking questions—is the ideal setting for two people who are professionally at odds to discover that proximity and pressure have a way of rearranging prior certainties. 💛
Kate Mathieson writes romantic comedy with the light touch and emotional accessibility that has built her readership in the clean and wholesome romance space—stories where the chemistry is real and the humor is genuine without requiring darkness or explicit content to earn its emotional payoff. The Italian holiday setting is rendered with enough specificity to function as its own pleasure, and Gemma’s voice—dry, self-aware, and increasingly surprised by what she is feeling—carries the novel with the comic authority the premise demands. 🌺
What makes this delightful: Kate Mathieson delivers an enemies-to-lovers Italian holiday romantic comedy with genuine warmth—a terrible week, a blind date disaster, a family wedding in Tuscany, and a work nemesis who turns out to be considerably less easy to hate in Italy than he was in the office. 🌟
Joan Didion arrived in Miami in the 1980s and looked past the fluorescent waters and pastel architecture to find something considerably murkier: a city operating at the intersection of Cuban exile politics, CIA operations, cocaine trafficking, and the particular kind of American governmental betrayal that leaves communities permanently suspicious of official narrative. The postcard version of Miami and the operational reality of the place Didion documented share almost nothing except geography. 🌴
The thread running through the book is the US government’s relationship with the Cuban exile community in Dade County—a history of recruitment, manipulation, and abandonment that Didion traces from the Bay of Pigs through the Kennedy assassination through Iran-Contra, finding in each case the same pattern: promise, use, and discard. Hotels offering guerrilla discounts. Gun shops running Father’s Day promotions. A real estate market where rapid ocean access was a selling point for the genuinely wealthy who might need to leave quickly. A city that in the 1980s had more in common with a Third World capital—drug trade, racial stratification, skyrocketing murder rates—than with the American city it nominally was. 🏙️
Didion writes Miami with the compressed, elliptical authority that made her one of the essential American journalists of the twentieth century—a prose style that withholds as strategically as it reveals, forcing readers to do the connective work that makes the conclusions feel earned rather than delivered. This is reportage that reads as literature, from a writer who understood that the most important American stories were often the ones that the official version actively obscured. 📖
What makes this essential: Joan Didion’s Miami is one of the great works of American political journalism—a forensic examination of Cuban exile politics, CIA manipulation, and cocaine money that reveals the city beneath the postcard in all its complicated, violent, and fascinating reality. 🌟
Two weeks ago, Lexi O’Reilly had her perfect job. Today she is being fired for witnessing something she should not have seen, with a social media scandal about to detonate and nowhere to disappear to. Tristan Martinelli—her brother’s best friend and an oceanographer—has his own crisis: a deadline looming on a television series he does not have enough footage or funding to finish. Two people in need of a solution, each with a problem the other could potentially solve. 🌊
The opportunity is perfect: a three-month position at an exclusive private island resort with some of the best-preserved coral reefs in the world—Lexi running the hotel, Tristan the dive center. The only condition is that they must apply as a couple. Pretending to be engaged to the man you are already in love with is, theoretically, the simplest possible version of fake dating. Theoretically. In practice, three months on a private island paradise with excellent reefs and very few other people has a way of making the distinction between performance and reality increasingly difficult to maintain. 💛
Sophia Karlson writes destination fake-dating romantic comedy with the specific warmth and humor that makes the subgenre so reliably entertaining—a hero and heroine whose practical arrangement becomes emotionally complicated faster than either of them planned for, a setting that removes all the usual social buffers, and a romantic resolution that earns its happiness through the specific difficulty of admitting to feelings you have been actively pretending not to have. 🐠
What makes this irresistible: Sophia Karlson delivers a fake-dating destination romance with genuine sparkle—a private island resort, a woman already in love with her fake fiancé, three months of coral reefs and forced proximity, and all the rules that paradise was always going to dissolve. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





