Jade returns to Chicago after being wrongfully fired from her dream job, violating both promises she made to herself a decade ago: never work for the family restaurant again, and never see Logan, her cheating ex-boyfriend, again. The universe has a sense of humor—when the restaurant delivery driver is murdered, Jade takes his position. The detective assigned to the case? That would be Logan. As Jade adjusts to life back in the family business, she receives odd delivery orders, threatening messages, and the growing realization that she might become as dead as the driver if she doesn’t solve this mystery. 🍝
Nicolette Pierce builds a cozy culinary mystery on the foundation of forced returns and uncomfortable reunions, creating natural conflict before the murder even enters the picture. Jade’s dual promises establish her character quickly—she had legitimate reasons to leave both the restaurant and Logan behind, making her return genuinely difficult rather than convenient plotting. The wrongful firing adds injustice to injury, giving Jade wounds beyond just professional setbacks. 🔪
The Chicago Italian restaurant setting provides authentic culinary atmosphere and tight family dynamics that cozy mystery readers crave. Pierce understands that family businesses come with built-in drama, personalities who can’t simply be avoided, and the kind of loyalty conflicts that complicate murder investigations. The ex-boyfriend detective creates both romantic tension and investigative obstacles—Jade can’t exactly avoid the man leading the murder case. 🚗
The threatening messages and odd delivery orders suggest the killer has Jade in their sights, escalating stakes beyond intellectual puzzle-solving into personal danger. Pierce’s title showcases the Italian-American food culture that permeates the setting, while the delivery driver murder connects to Jade’s new position in ways that make the investigation unavoidably personal. The series potential is clear—Jade’s back in Chicago, embedded in the family business, with an ex-boyfriend detective who’ll presumably recur. 🕵️♀️
Why this delivers: It’s a cozy culinary mystery that earns its conflicts through character history rather than forcing them. The Chicago Italian restaurant setting feels specific and authentic, while the ex-boyfriend detective adds romantic complication to the mystery. Perfect for readers who like their pasta with a side of murder and their amateur sleuths with actual stakes. 🍷
They were teenagers when Alden Stokes first climbed through her bedroom window. He was her first hand-hold, her first kiss, her first everything. The tumultuous years transformed them into adults while circumstances forced them apart. Now she’s found her way back to the only man she’s ever loved, and she’s not letting him go. Sometimes hope holds us by the throat—and sometimes that grip is exactly what we need to survive. 💕
S.M. Shade constructs a romantic suspense duet around one of the genre’s most powerful foundations: first love separated by time and circumstance, reunited with higher stakes than teenage romance could ever carry. The bedroom window detail immediately establishes intimacy and history, suggesting a connection that began with rebellion and secrecy. The “first everything” claim raises the emotional ante—this isn’t casual teenage dating but formative relationship territory. 🌙
The “Almost Duet” structure promises a complete story told across two books, giving Shade room to develop both the romance and the suspense elements without rushing either. The duet format has become increasingly popular in romantic suspense, offering more space than a standalone while avoiding the commitment of a full series. Shade’s opening quote about hope holding us by the throat signals literary ambitions beyond simple romance plotting. 📚
The “circumstances pushed us apart” framework leaves room for external forces rather than simple relationship failure, suggesting the separation wasn’t their choice—always a more emotionally satisfying setup than “we broke up because we fought.” The present-tense determination to not let him go again implies both character growth and potentially dangerous obstacles to their reunion. The romantic suspense genre requires genuine danger alongside romance, and Shade’s setup suggests both elements will carry weight. 🔥
What makes this resonate: It’s second-chance romance with first-love intensity, structured as a duet to give the story room to breathe. The bedroom window beginning creates instant intimacy, while the “hope holds us by the throat” theme promises emotional depth alongside suspense. For readers who want their reunited lovers fighting for survival together. 💔
Mya’s working her bookshop shift when a vampire decides to kill her. Enter the tall, dark, handsome stranger who’s been lurking around the store lately—turns out he’s Death himself, and he’s got a deal she allegedly can’t refuse: die now or become a vampire and Queen of the Wayward. She picks option B, obviously. Now she’s undead, running the Home of Wayward Souls (wild, unhappy, troublemaking spirits are all hers to manage), and the Grim Reaper wants to take her on a date. This is absolutely not how she imagined her Tuesday going. 💀
Andie M. Long delivers paranormal romance with a humor-forward voice that acknowledges how absurd these situations would actually feel. Mya’s reaction to suddenly being dead, royal, and romantically pursued by Death himself reads like someone actually processing impossible circumstances rather than swooning through them. The bookshop-worker-to-vampire-queen pipeline is wonderfully ridiculous while the Wayward Souls management provides ongoing conflict and story potential. 🧛♀️
Death as romantic lead is bold positioning—Long takes the ultimate dark mysterious stranger archetype and makes him literally death, complete with day-job responsibilities and apparent dating preferences. The Grim Reaper wanting to date her adds absurdist comedy to supernatural romance, while the Queen of Wayward Souls role gives Mya actual responsibilities beyond just being Death’s girlfriend. The troublemaking spirits premise promises ongoing episodic chaos. ☠️
Long’s title “Suck My Life” captures the series’ irreverent tone while the “Sucking Dead” series name commits fully to vampire pun territory. The voice suggests Long is writing for readers who want their paranormal romance self-aware and fun rather than brooding and serious. The forced choice between death and vampirism with royal responsibilities is a fresh spin on the tired “human girl becomes vampire” trope. 👑
Why this works: It’s paranormal vampire romance that doesn’t take itself too seriously while still delivering genuine romantic and supernatural stakes. Death as love interest is high-concept enough to stand out, while the Wayward Souls management provides story structure. For readers who want their undead romance with personality and humor. 🖤
Fruit of the Flesh
Early 1900s New York glitters with Gilded Age excess, where fortunes are made and lost overnight, and social climbing is a blood sport. Former ballerina Petronille De Villier makes an unconventional choice in this world of rigid expectations: she marries Arkady Kamenev, a struggling sculptor whose artistic talent far exceeds his social standing or financial security. For Petronille, the marriage offers escape from her family’s unsavory legacy—a chance to distance herself from scandal and reinvent her identity. For Arkady, the De Villier name promises the patronage and social connections his art desperately needs to survive. It should be a simple, mutually beneficial arrangement 🎭
But nothing about this marriage stays simple. Beneath their marriage of convenience lurks a darker recognition that neither of them anticipated. In each other, Petronille and Arkady see reflections of their own dangerous appetites—hungers they’ve spent years suppressing or hiding from polite society. There’s something predatory in how they circle each other, something that goes far beyond the terms of their practical arrangement. The attraction isn’t just physical; it’s psychological, primal, unsettling 🖤
As buried secrets begin surfacing—as they always do in marriages built on mutual deception—bodies start disappearing from the glittering social circles they navigate. Coincidence? Perhaps. But Petronille and Arkady discover their union runs far deeper than social advantage. Their shared obsessions, their matching darkness, their complementary appetites draw them into an intoxicating dance of predator and prey. The terrifying part? It’s never quite clear who is the hunter and who is the hunted. They take turns, switching roles with an ease that would alarm them if they weren’t so fascinated by each other 💀
Behind the glamour of Gilded Age excess, behind the glittering ballrooms and respectable facades, something monstrous blooms. Petronille and Arkady’s marriage becomes less about escaping their pasts and more about embracing their true natures—together. But in a world where reputation is everything and scandal can destroy lives, how long can they maintain the illusion of normalcy? And more importantly, do they even want to? ⚡
Why this grips from page one: I.V. Ophelia delivers darkly seductive gothic romance that subverts Gilded Age glamour with genuine menace. This isn’t a sweet historical romance with minor obstacles; it’s a psychologically complex exploration of two damaged people who recognize something monstrous in each other and find it intoxicating rather than repellent. The period setting adds lavish detail while the Gothic elements provide genuine unease. Perfect for readers who love their historical romance dark and morally ambiguous, marriages of convenience that become dangerously real, and protagonists whose happy ending might be everyone else’s nightmare. New release 🌹
Homestead Crafter: A Litrpg Crafting Slice of Life
Getting expelled from your family because you received a crafting class instead of a combat class seems harsh. But that’s exactly what happens when your father is a warrior who values strength above all else and sees anything that isn’t direct combat as weakness. So here’s the protagonist, booted from the only home they’ve ever known, with nothing but a “useless” crafting class and a burning determination to prove their father catastrophically wrong about their worth 🔨
Setting out for the Wilds—the untamed, monster-filled lands beyond civilization’s borders—isn’t exactly a safe choice. But our newly minted outcast has made a promise to themselves: they’ll become a successful settler, build a thriving homestead, and demonstrate that crafting isn’t weakness but the foundation of survival itself. It might sound impossible, but here’s the secret advantage: as a Master of Crafts, they have access to all professions and all the tools needed to build everything from scratch. While combat classes might be better at killing monsters, crafting classes can literally build civilization 🏡
The Wilds are dangerous, filled with creatures that would happily make a meal of any settler foolish enough to venture into their territory. But danger and opportunity often walk hand in hand. While establishing a homestead and fighting for survival sounds difficult, having every crafting profession at your fingertips changes the equation dramatically. Need a house? Build it. Need weapons? Forge them. Need food? Farm it, hunt it, or cook it. The only limit is creativity and work ethic—both of which our protagonist has in abundance 🌲
There’s an unexpected bonus to homesteading in the Wilds: our crafter has a certain way of drawing the sapient denizens of the forest to them. Intelligent creatures who normally avoid humans find themselves curious about this peculiar settler who builds instead of destroys, who creates rather than conquers. Slowly, carefully, a community begins forming around the homestead—not just a place to live, but something larger and more meaningful than anyone expected 🦌
What drew me in: S.D. McKittrick delivers cozy LitRPG that focuses on building and creating rather than endless combat grinding. The homesteading aspect provides satisfying progression as readers watch infrastructure and community develop from nothing. Perfect for LitRPG fans tired of constant battle sequences, readers who love crafting systems and base-building mechanics, and anyone who’s ever wanted a fantasy story where “useless” support classes prove their worth. New release that offers wholesome fantasy with genuine stakes 🌟
A Play for Love (The Improbable Meet-Cute: Second Chances)
Years ago, during a college production of Romeo and Juliet, Rory and Oliver shared one perfect stage kiss before life pulled them in different directions. It was the kind of moment that stays with you—electric, unforgettable, impossibly romantic—and then it was over. They went their separate ways, carrying the memory of what might have been if timing had cooperated. Now Rory finds herself drowning her Valentine’s Day sorrows at brunch, surrounded by happy couples and feeling thoroughly sorry for herself 💔
Then she spots him. Oliver. Her former Romeo. Except he’s not dressed as a tragic Shakespearean hero this time—he’s wearing nothing but gold shorts and wings, playing Cupid for the lovelorn masses in some kind of Valentine’s Day promotion. It’s absurd, ridiculous, and somehow perfect. The chemistry that sparked on stage all those years ago immediately reignites, as if no time has passed at all. Some connections don’t fade; they just wait for their moment 💘
The timing should be perfect now. They’re both single, both older and presumably wiser, both clearly still attracted to each other. The stars have finally aligned after years of near-misses and bad timing. But here’s the thing about real life: it’s messier than stage directions. Even with fate seemingly pushing them together, even with undeniable chemistry crackling between them, Rory and Oliver discover that second chances aren’t automatically successful just because the first chance showed promise 🎭
They’ll need more than Shakespeare’s guidance to turn this reunion into a true romance. They’ll need honesty about why their connection ended the first time, courage to be vulnerable in ways they couldn’t manage in college, and willingness to fight for what they want instead of letting circumstances dictate outcomes. The question is: are these former leads ready to take on the roles of their lives, or will they let this second chance slip away like the first? ⚡
Here’s what you’re getting:
Trilina Pucci delivers a sweet, funny contemporary romance about second-chance love and improbable reunions. The theater background adds charm without overshadowing the central relationship, while the Valentine’s Day Cupid setup provides just enough absurdity to keep things light. Perfect for readers who love second-chance romances with genuine obstacles, meet-cute premises that work, and protagonists whose chemistry survived years of separation intact. New release that proves some stage kisses are just rehearsals for the real thing 💕





