When Penny Connor walked in on her fiancé with another woman, she made two decisions in rapid succession: she called off the wedding, and she still went on the honeymoon. The venue was paid for. The tickets were bought. Tuscany was waiting. Going alone was not the romantic vision she had planned, but it was considerably better than staying home to process her humiliation in a city that knew her. She didn’t need a groom to enjoy Italy. 🇮🇹
Then she met Ethan. One week of uncomplicated, sun-drenched fun, the kind that only a foreign country and complete emotional liberation can produce. When it ended, she left a thank-you note and a deliberately erased trail. She had a life to reassemble back home, and Ethan was a beautiful parenthesis—not a chapter. She was very clear about this in her own mind. 🌞
Ethan Hartnell has been living his life on his own terms for long enough that being traded to the San Francisco Strikers and told to clean up his act is an unwelcome development. San Francisco could be a fresh start—and if memory serves, the woman who left him in her hotel room in Italy with nothing but a note happens to live there. It’s a big city, so finding her isn’t likely. Until she walks into a bar that turns out to be a team favorite, and Ethan realizes that she is very much findable after all, and that this time he has no intention of letting her disappear. 🏒
What makes this fun: Stephanie Kay launches the San Francisco Strikers series with a sparkling sports romance—a jilted bride, an Italian fling, and a hockey player who is very good at not giving up when something is worth pursuing. 🌟
Nora Newberry has always had two gifts: an exceptional talent for baking and an inconvenient instinct for detecting murder. Readers first met her in the original Milburn series, where she solved cases with the kind of methodical, flour-dusted determination that makes cozy mystery heroines genuinely beloved. Twenty-five years have passed in story time since those early investigations—twenty-five years of life, change, and the accumulation of experience that transforms a determined young woman into someone considerably more formidable. 🍰
The Return to Milburn boxed set collects three complete novels that bring Nora back after that long absence, with everything she’s learned and everything she’s carrying. Milburn itself has changed in the intervening decades, and so has Nora—but the town’s appetite for murder, it turns out, has not diminished at all during her hiatus. The cases in this collection give her skills and her history something genuinely worthy to work against. 🔍
McGovern writes culinary cozy mystery with genuine affection for the genre’s pleasures—recipes woven through the narrative, a community that feels inhabited rather than staged, and a detective whose intelligence is matched by her warmth. The three-book collection gives readers both the satisfaction of individual mysteries and the pleasure of watching a beloved character settle back into her element after a long time away. 🏡
What makes this a treat: Nancy McGovern brings Nora Newberry back with all the warmth and wit that made the original Milburn series so beloved—three complete culinary cozy mysteries in one free bundle, for readers who never stopped wondering what happened to her. 🌟
Four years of MMA. Four years of punching and kicking his way through opponents who couldn’t touch him where it actually hurt. Four years of seeing Maddie’s face every time he closed his eyes—and knowing, with the particular helplessness of a man who has no one to fight about it, that she left because she couldn’t watch him get hurt anymore. Six months pregnant. No warning. Across the country. He had to live with it. He didn’t have a choice. 🥊
Then his little girl calls. She is four years old and her friends all have daddies, and she wants to know if he will be hers for her birthday party. The answer is immediate and absolute. He is going. Which means he is also going to see Maddie for the first time in four years, in circumstances that have no script and no rules and a four-year-old in the middle of everything who has no idea what her phone call just set in motion. 💔
The complete four-book series is collected here—which means no waiting between installments and no unresolved cliffhangers. JJ Knight builds the story across four volumes with the patience the premise requires, letting the emotional stakes accumulate before resolving them in ways that feel genuinely earned. A man who fights for a living, a woman who left to protect herself from watching him, and the daughter who pulled them back into the same room. 💛
What makes this compelling: JJ Knight delivers a complete MMA romance series with real emotional weight—Fight for Her is a second-chance love story about two people whose reasons for separating were legitimate and whose reasons for trying again are better, collected in one free bundle from a USA Today bestselling author. 🌟
In the Great Quiet
A cannon booms at high noon on September 16, 1893, and thousands of people surge forward across the Oklahoma prairie in one of history’s most dramatic land rushes. Among them is Minnie Hoopes—tenacious, fiercely independent, and entirely alone. She is racing toward a homestead claim and the life she has decided she is going to build, on land that was not hers until the moment that cannon fired and suddenly could be. 🌾
What follows is a survival story of genuine severity. The frontier is beautiful and brutal in roughly equal measure, and Minnie is no romantic about either quality. She guards her solitude like a resource, keeps her distance from neighboring homesteaders, and finds her deepest peace under the vast night skies of a landscape that has no interest in anyone’s plans. But this is outlaw country, and the frontier has its own agenda—two dead gunfighters, a renegade outlaw named Stot who discovers her secrets and refuses to move on, and a past that keeps following her despite every mile she puts between herself and it. 🌵
Vogt based this novel on the true story of her own great-great-grandparents, which gives the frontier hardship and the slow growth of connection between Minnie and Stot a weight that purely invented stories can’t quite replicate. The land itself is a presence throughout—demanding, gorgeous, indifferent—and Minnie’s relationship with it is as central to the story as any human bond. 💛
What makes this sweeping: Laura Vogt has written a transportive piece of American historical fiction rooted in real lives and real landscape—In the Great Quiet is a survival story, a love story, and a meditation on the elemental human need to find a place that is genuinely home. 🌟
From their first meeting at St Andrews University to their current position at the center of a monarchy navigating the most turbulent period in its recent history, the story of William and Catherine is one that has unfolded almost entirely in public—and yet, as royal journalist Russell Myers demonstrates through extensive palace access, what the public has seen represents only a fraction of what has actually been happening. 👑
The book traces the couple’s relationship through the controversies and crises that have defined the past several years: the deeply damaging Sussex departure and its reverberations through the royal family; the formation of what palace insiders call “the Cambridge way”—a deliberate, considered approach to modern royal engagement; the profound impact of Queen Elizabeth II’s death on the institution they are being shaped to lead; and, most recently, the shock of cancer diagnoses for both the Princess of Wales and the King, which arrived at a moment of already significant institutional strain. 🌹
Myers draws on never-before-told context from numerous palace insiders to offer a perspective on William and Catherine that goes considerably beyond what royal coverage typically provides—not just the public narrative but the private deliberations, the resilience, and the long-term vision that the couple has been quietly developing for the monarchy they will eventually inherit. The picture that emerges is of two people more purposeful and more prepared than the turbulence around them might suggest. 💙
What makes this essential: Russell Myers is one of Britain’s most respected royal correspondents, and this intimate, deeply sourced biography of the Prince and Princess of Wales offers the most authoritative account yet of how they intend to modernize an ancient institution in an era that gives them very little margin for error. 🏆
In the fall of 1974, Larry Bird—one of the greatest basketball players who ever lived—was hauling trash in French Lick, Indiana, a tiny town in the second poorest county in the state. He had dropped out of Indiana University, spurning legendary coach Bobby Knight. His future in the sport that would make him immortal appeared, at that moment, to be over. He was twenty years old and running out of road. 🏀
Two men changed everything. Bob King was an old coach with bad knees and a deep understanding of what Bird was and what he could become. Bill Hodges knew what it felt like to be overlooked and underfunded and still worth betting on. In the spring of 1975, they convinced Bird to come to Indiana State—a program so underfunded it couldn’t fill its own arena—and play basketball. Then they built a team around him, deliberately, from the players that everyone else had passed on: castoffs, leftovers, the kind of athletes who work harder than anyone because they know exactly what it cost them to get here. 🏆
What happened next—the undefeated regular season, the rise to national prominence, the 1979 NCAA championship game against Magic Johnson and Michigan State that became one of the most watched college basketball games in history—is the kind of story that should be impossible. Keith O’Brien tells it with the narrative drive and historical depth of his celebrated previous books, grounding the miracle in the specific economic and cultural landscape of rural Indiana. 🌽
What makes this extraordinary: From the New York Times bestselling author of Charlie Hustle and Fly Girls comes a sports biography of exceptional craft—the true story of how a trash collector from a forgotten town became a legend, with two overlooked coaches who believed in him before anyone else did. 🌟





