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Author: Ruth Cardello
FREE
Romantic Comedy

Alethea has always operated on the principle that she and her best friend Lil were a unit against the world—which worked fine until Lil found her own version of Prince Charming, reconnected with her family, and left Alethea somewhat on the outside of the life they’d built together. When Alethea uncovers a genuine threat to Lil’s family and decides to handle it herself despite being explicitly told to stay out of it, Ruth Cardello deploys her protagonist’s defining quality immediately: this is a woman whose protective instincts override her self-preservation instincts, which makes her both the person you want on your side and a persistent problem for anyone assigned to manage her. 💙

Marc Stone has been watching Alethea since she walked through his security system with impressive ease, and his interest has only grown since. A decorated Marine prepared for most contingencies has encountered nothing that quite prepared him for this particular wild redhead—strong, beautiful, flawed, and fiercely protective in ways that he recognizes and cannot help admiring even when she’s actively complicating his operational picture. Cardello builds the will-they-won’t-they with real comic energy. 😂

The Billionaire trilogy within Cardello’s larger Legacy of Love universe has a devoted following, and *Breaching the Billionaire* demonstrates why Alethea became such a fan favorite supporting character before getting her own book—she’s genuinely funny, genuinely capable, and genuinely complicated in ways that simpler romance heroines aren’t. Cardello writes with the warmth and wit that has made her one of contemporary romance’s most consistent presences, and this volume delivers both in full measure. 🔥

Why this entertains: A woman who walked through a billionaire’s security system for fun, a Marine who can’t stop thinking about her, and a threat to her best friend that she’s absolutely going to handle whether anyone likes it or not.

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Author: R.L. Dunn
FREE
Romantic Suspense

After his last brutal tour in Afghanistan, Navy SEAL Lieutenant Commander Ian Chase returned to civilian life and resumed control of the Chase Group security and international conglomerate with his brother. At a charity function, a chance meeting with FBI art historian Cassiopeia Ellis produces a double surprise: she’s undercover on an active case, and she’s the same woman Ian met six years ago—a meeting he’s never forgotten and she apparently has, entirely. R.L. Dunn opens the Chase Security series with a second-chance setup that has an unusual and genuinely interesting structure. 🔍

The reason Cassie has no memory of their first meeting is the psychological core of the novel: she has repressed everything connected to a trauma she sustained that same night, six years ago. The nightmares and fear that have shaped her life since then are divorced from the memories that would explain them, which means she is simultaneously drawn to Ian for reasons she can’t identify and unable to access the context that would make sense of that pull. Dunn handles the psychological dimension with real care—this is not a simple amnesia plot but a specific trauma response with realistic complexity. 💙

The undercover art investigation gives the romantic suspense its external plot engine, and Ian’s security background gives the couple complementary professional capabilities that let them work together as genuine partners rather than one protecting the other. The Chase Security series has built a romantic suspense readership that responds to exactly this combination of military hero competence, psychological depth, and the particular pleasure of a love story whose obstacle is something genuinely worth overcoming. ⭐

Why this draws you in: A woman with repressed trauma, a man who remembers everything about their first meeting while she remembers nothing, and an undercover art investigation that brings them back together—Secure Desire is romantic suspense with genuine psychological depth.

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Author: Harriet Caves
FREE
Historical Regency Romance

Lady Marianne has made her choice: spinsterhood, permanently, as a protective shield for her siblings against their cruel father. It’s a sacrifice she has accepted and organized her life around. Then her youngest sister vanishes during a stag hunt and Marianne races into the woods to find her—directly into the path of Duke Dominic’s rifle. Harriet Caves opens the Unwanted Sisters series with the kind of inciting incident that generates immediate consequences: a near-miss that gives a man with no intention of marrying a sudden and expedient reason to make an offer. 🌿

Dominic’s logic is cold and practical—a lifetime of chaos has made him determined never to be trapped into marriage, and here is a situation in which he controls the terms. What he hasn’t accounted for is that Marianne has equally strong reasons for keeping emotional distance, and that the practical marriage of mutual convenience he has proposed is going to become considerably more complicated as proximity works its inevitable effects. Caves builds the tension between trust and attraction with real patience. 🏰

The cruel father dimension gives the novel genuine stakes beyond the personal—Marianne’s spinsterhood was always a strategy rather than a preference, and becoming a duchess changes the protection she can offer her siblings in ways that complicate both her resistance to the marriage and her resistance to her feelings for Dominic. The Unwanted Sisters series uses this family dynamic as its ongoing emotional architecture, giving each subsequent book in the series its specific character alongside the romance. 🌹

Why this charms: A spinster who vowed to stay single to protect her family, a duke who doesn’t do marriage, a rifle and a near-miss, and a hasty proposal that neither of them expected to feel anything about.

Chasing the Clouds Away

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Author: Debbie Macomber
NEW RELEASE
Contemporary Women’s Fiction

Maisy Gallagher set aside her own dreams when her father died, stepping up to help her family in ways that were right and necessary and quietly costly. She has made peace with that choice, mostly. Chase Furst has organized his entire life around himself and his work as a bank executive—a childhood shaped by his mother’s addiction left him cynical and emotionally distant, and he has built sufficient insulation around those wounds that he rarely has to feel them. Debbie Macomber opens *Chasing the Clouds Away* with the careful opposition of two people who have made entirely opposite errors in how to live. ☁️

The meeting that changes Chase begins not with attraction but with an act of simple human generosity that he has no framework to process. Maisy offers to help him during a moment of genuine need and declines his money—asking instead that he pay it forward through an act of true selflessness. A man whose entire professional life runs on transactional logic has no idea where to begin with that request, and Macomber uses his bewilderment as both the novel’s comic dimension and its emotional engine. 💛

Macomber is one of the bestselling women’s fiction authors in American publishing with a readership that has followed her across decades and dozens of books, and *Chasing the Clouds Away* demonstrates the qualities that have built that loyalty: emotional intelligence that never tips into sentimentality, a genuine belief in people’s capacity for change, and characters whose specific damage feels real rather than archetypal. The pay-it-forward premise gives the novel a structural warmth that distinguishes it from standard redemption romance. 🌤️

Why this warms you: A woman who gave up her dreams for her family, a cynical banker who doesn’t know how to be selfless, and a simple act of generosity that neither of them saw coming—Debbie Macomber’s new release at her most affecting.

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Author: Kate Clark Stone
NEW RELEASE
Mothers & Children Fiction

Mack Williams was the next big thing in motorsports before her wild ways forced her out. Ten years later she’s a single mom in rural Indiana running a struggling family business and caring for a father who needs full-time help—the fastest woman on four wheels now drives car pool, her dreams turned to dust. Then her childhood idol Janet Joyner, famed for breaking gender barriers on the track, sees the spark that Mack has been quietly smothering under responsibility and offers her one last chance to qualify for the Indy 500. Kate Clark Stone opens this novel with the particular emotional charge of a second-chance story that costs something real to pursue. 🏁

The decision Mack faces is genuinely complicated—saying yes means moving in with her estranged sister, confronting her daughter’s absentee father, and working alongside Leo, her gorgeous new teammate who is every kind of distraction she can’t afford. Stone doesn’t simplify the stakes: Mack’s impulsive choices cost her the first version of her career, and she knows it, which means this second chance carries a weight of self-knowledge that purely optimistic comeback stories often lack. 🔥

The motorsports setting is rendered with the specific authenticity of a writer who has done the research—the Indy 500 is a world with its own culture, its own hierarchy, and its own relationship to gender that gives the novel real texture beyond the romance and family dynamics. The title’s reference to Indy’s traditional race date gives it a poignancy that works on multiple levels. As a new release from a fresh voice in women’s fiction, this is a debut worth paying attention to. 🌟

Why this pulls you in: The fastest woman on four wheels driving car pool instead, one last shot at the Indy 500, an estranged sister, and a teammate she absolutely cannot fall for—The Last Sunday in May is women’s fiction with real momentum.

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Author: Jana DeLeon
NEW RELEASE
Private Investigator Mysteries

Yoga retreats are supposed to have bodies in the sense of participants doing downward dog—not in the sense of a dead retreat owner in the marsh. When Eleanor turns up dead, her sister Mildred is convinced the shady business partner is responsible, but there’s no evidence to prove it. Ronald and Gertie know exactly who to call, and Swamp Team 3 is on the case. Jana DeLeon opens the 30th Miss Fortune Mystery with the same irreverent comic energy that has made this series one of the most beloved in cozy mystery—thirty books in and the formula still delivers because the characters are genuinely funny and genuinely specific. 🐊

The complication that gives this installment its particular tension is institutional: Sheriff Carter is being audited by the state police on claims that he’s been feeding Fortune confidential information. Which he has been, obviously, but the timing is terrible. Swamp Team 3 is going to help Mildred regardless—they just have to do it while staying below the radar so Carter doesn’t lose his position. The constraint of having to investigate carefully rather than enthusiastically is, for a team that operates at maximum chaos, a genuinely interesting narrative challenge. 😂

DeLeon has built one of cozy mystery’s most loyal readerships through thirty volumes of Sinful, Louisiana adventures, and the consistency of the series—its specific sense of place, its recurring cast of eccentric community members, and its reliable delivery of laugh-out-loud moments alongside genuine mystery plotting—is remarkable. New readers can enter here without prior knowledge; longtime readers will find everything they love about the series operating at full capacity. As a new release this is an immediate must-read for the franchise’s devoted fans. 🌿

Why this entertains: A dead yoga retreat owner, a shady business partner with no provable motive, an audited sheriff who can’t officially help, and Swamp Team 3 operating below the radar—Miss Fortune Mystery #30 at full comic power.