A man who calls himself DJ walks into Dr. Angela Blackwell’s office with an unusual request: he is a decorated war veteran who has decided to die in six months, and he wants a distinguished psychologist to stand witness afterward—not to stop him, but to ensure his wife won’t face legal consequences and can collect the death benefit he has arranged for her. He is not seeking therapy. He is seeking a witness to a decision he has already made. 😔
Dr. Blackwell is in the middle of reconstructing her own life after losing her husband. She is not in an uncomplicated position to take on someone else’s grief. She takes him on anyway—not because she agrees to his terms, but because she recognizes his unusual request for exactly what it is: a subconscious cry for help from a man who has decided that asking directly is no longer available to him. He won’t share his past. He won’t share his name. She has six months and a deck of cards stacked entirely against her. 🧠
What follows is a battle of wills between two people who do not know how to lose—a suicidal veteran who has built his decision on a foundation of trauma he has never fully examined, and a psychologist who refuses to be the passive witness he came looking for. Leslie Wolfe builds the tension between them with psychological precision, and the investigation Dr. Blackwell conducts into DJ’s past—searching for the truth he won’t give her voluntarily—drives the thriller with genuine momentum. 💔
What makes this gripping: Leslie Wolfe constructs a psychological thriller of unusual emotional intelligence—a race against a self-imposed deadline, a psychologist whose grief makes her uniquely qualified to understand her client, and a veteran’s buried trauma that neither of them can afford to leave untouched. 🏆
Amelia Parker is thirty-eight, a successful set designer, and on a mission: she wants to get pregnant, and she wants to do it soon. Her best friend’s response to this plan is to hire a matchmaker, on the theory that Amelia deserves a romance reset before she embarks on single parenthood—that there might be a version of this future that includes a partner rather than excluding one by default. Amelia agrees to the matchmaking with the tolerant skepticism of someone who expects it not to work. 💛
Lincoln Hayes is a widower whose twins are about to leave for college, and he is ready to begin the next chapter with some actual company in it. Dating after decades feels strange enough that hiring a matchmaker who vets candidates seems considerably more sensible than navigating the alternative. His first date in twenty years is his first love—Amelia, the woman who broke his heart and got away, sitting across a restaurant table with the chemistry between them exactly as strong as it was when they were young and considerably more complicated now. 💔
Neither of them planned for this. Both of them find it impossible to dismiss. Amelia’s biological clock is real and pressing, her desire for a child is genuine and non-negotiable, and Lincoln is a man who has already raised two children and is standing at the threshold of freedom from exactly that kind of responsibility. Whether what they had—and still have—is enough to bridge what separates them is the question Kay Lyons builds the series on with warmth, humor, and genuine emotional care. 🌸
What makes this charming: Kay Lyons launches the Make Me A Match series with a second-chance romance for grown-ups—two people whose lives have become complicated in opposite directions, reconnected by a matchmaker neither of them needed, discovering that some chemistry doesn’t expire. 🌟
Emily Rockford is beaten, broke, and running from a dangerous criminal—specifically her ex-boyfriend, who has the added complication of working for the FBI, which limits the conventional options considerably. She needs a job, a place to be, and ideally a situation in which she does not have to explain her circumstances to anyone with the authority to complicate them further. The job answering phones for what appears to be a pest control company seems like exactly that kind of situation. 😬
The pest control company is a front. The actual business is contract killing—a big, dangerous, professional operation that has been running quietly behind the legitimate-sounding name while Emily was answering the phones without asking any questions she wasn’t paid to ask. The moment she understands what she has walked into, she understands something else: there is no quitting. The people who run this operation are not the kind of people who allow witnesses to simply resign and move on with their lives. She is in, whether she agreed to be or not. 💀
What Emily does with that situation—whether she finds a way to run, adapts to the world she has stumbled into, or finds something in herself that the world she came from never required—is the engine of M.O. Mack’s propulsive action series opener. The premise is constructed for maximum momentum, and the heroine’s trajectory from desperate fugitive to something considerably harder to define moves with the energy of a series that knows exactly what it is and delivers it without hesitation. 🔥
What makes this addictive: M.O. Mack launches The Suite #45 Series with a high-octane vigilante thriller—a woman on the run who lands in the one place her particular situation actually makes sense, and a series premise that turns desperation into an origin story. 🌟
Ordinal Trail (Otherworld Adventures Book 1)
Vester Gambit had a simple plan for the day: drop some mail off with his twin brother on the way to college. Then a truck hits the bus, and Vester wakes up somewhere that is definitively not Ohio. Ordinal is one world among a near-infinite multitude—a place where the gods have implemented a System designed to guide people toward their full potential, a kind of cosmic leveling mechanic that has been quietly running the lives of its inhabitants for longer than anyone can remember. 🌀
The gods did not account for Vester. They do not want him anywhere near the System. They have extremely specific reasons for this, none of which they are prepared to share with him directly. The problem is that rules are rules, and the rules say that anyone who arrives in Ordinal gets to participate in the Otherworld Adventures whether the divine administration approves or not. Vester is in. The gods are annoyed. The adventure begins with the particular energy of a protagonist who has no idea what he’s walked into and the particular stubbornness of someone who is not going to let that stop him. 🎮
Deacon Frost writes isekai fantasy with a comic sensibility that keeps the stakes high while refusing to take itself too seriously—the humor is built into the world’s logic rather than layered on top of it, and the romance that develops has the odd, specific chemistry that this kind of story does best. Vester is an easy hero to root for: not because he is the most powerful person in the room, but because he faces obstacles that would flatten anyone else and keeps getting back up anyway. ⚡
What makes this fun: Deacon Frost launches Otherworld Adventures with the kind of isekai fantasy that earns its laughs and its heart in equal measure—a hero the gods didn’t want, a System that has no good answer for him, and a world that is considerably stranger and more entertaining than it had any right to be. 🌟
The Farrell family lives in a lovely old house near the Massachusetts coast, moving through the routines of a typical August morning with the comfortable ordinariness of a life that is working. Eight-year-old Charlie is hunting insects for his collection. Eleven-year-old Amanda, a talented gymnast already saving for Olympic tryouts, is preparing for her last meet of the summer. Ivan is distracted by his astronomy research. Polly is in the garden, trying to figure out how to get her children to eat more zucchini. They are a family as unremarkable and as particular as any family—until Amanda is diagnosed with AIDS. 💔
Alice Hoffman wrote this novel in 1988, when AIDS was still new enough to be surrounded by a fog of fear and misunderstanding that made the diagnosis something beyond medical—a social catastrophe as much as a physical one. Amanda contracted the disease through a blood transfusion, which does nothing to blunt the community’s retreat. Friends disappear. Neighbors distance themselves. The intimacy that held the family together dissolves as each member retreats into private grief that none of them can share with the others. 🌊
Charlie is forgotten for long stretches by parents too overwhelmed to attend to a child who is not dying. Ivan and Polly seek comfort outside their marriage. Amanda, who has held onto her dreams with the particular tenacity of an eleven-year-old who has not yet learned to doubt herself, must find a way to release them. Hoffman writes with the lyrical precision that has made her one of American fiction’s most consistently important voices—the emotional truth of each family member’s experience is rendered without sentimentality and without evasion. 🌿
What makes this essential: Alice Hoffman’s At Risk is a novel about what happens to a family when the unthinkable becomes ordinary—devastating, beautifully written, and as urgent and as human as the day it was published. 🏆
Maura Pierce has the life that was planned for her and has been planning herself for as long as she can remember: a bright future, a trust fund, and a boyfriend who cannot wait to settle down into the version of their lives that everyone around them has already agreed is the correct one. It almost seems like enough. The word “almost” is doing significant work in that sentence, and Maura is aware of it in the way that people are aware of things they’ve decided not to examine too closely. 💛
Then Nate Sullivan comes home. Nate—her childhood best friend, her first love, the boy who disappeared one night without explanation and broke her heart with the specific efficiency of someone she had trusted completely. He has been gone long enough that she rebuilt around the absence, constructed a functional life on top of it, convinced herself the reconstruction was the real thing. One look at him is enough to understand that the reconstruction was always temporary. 💔
The attraction that resurfaces threatens everything Maura and her parents have carefully built—the future, the relationship, the version of herself that she has been performing for years. Loyalties fracture. Secrets that explain Nate’s disappearance begin to surface, changing the shape of a past she thought she understood. Giving in to what she actually wants may cost her everything she has settled for. The question the novel asks—with genuine emotional honesty and real romantic pull—is whether what you’ve settled for was ever worth the cost of staying. 🌊
What makes this irresistible: Elizabeth O’Roark writes second-chance romance with the emotional precision the genre demands at its best—Undertow is a first-love story with teeth, a heroine whose conflict is completely real, and a reunion that earns every complicated feeling it produces. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





