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Diana Iverson needs a break from her stressful job, her cheating boyfriend, and the general velocity of a life that has stopped feeling like hers. Inheriting her eccentric Aunt Jean’s lake house near Lake Michigan seems like exactly the respite she needs—until the break-ins start, the unsettling events accumulate, and Diana begins to wonder whether her aunt’s death was as innocent as everyone seems to assume. Colleen Gleason launches the Wicks Hollow series with the precise combination of cozy mystery, romance, and paranormal warmth that the genre’s devotees come looking for. 🌊
The neighbor complication arrives in the form of Ethan Murphy, a sexy college professor who knows considerably more about Aunt Jean than any neighbor should—and whose knowledge Diana can’t explain in ways that make her comfortable trusting him. The tension between attraction and suspicion is one of cozy mystery romance’s most reliable engines, and Gleason runs it with the confidence of someone who has thought carefully about how the two forces complicate rather than simply oppose each other. 🔍
And then there is Aunt Jean herself, who has not entirely departed. The ghost element is handled with the warmth rather than the horror that the cozy genre requires—Aunt Jean communicating from beyond the grave feels less like a haunting and more like a stubborn woman refusing to leave unfinished business unfinished, which is entirely in keeping with the eccentric character Gleason establishes through other people’s memories of her. The Wicks Hollow world—quaint houses, eccentric residents, Lake Michigan atmosphere, and more than its share of mysteries—is rendered with genuine affection. ✨
Why this charms: An inherited lake house, a suspicious neighbor who knows too much, break-ins that keep happening, and an aunt who won’t stay quiet just because she’s dead—Sinister Summer is cozy mystery with real warmth and real wit.
Josslyn Tait has had one bad relationship after another, and finding her ex in bed with someone else has pushed her close to giving up on finding love altogether. Enter Kate Parker—her best friend’s sister, the biggest player in Riverside, and Josslyn’s least favorite person in a category that just got very competitive. When Kate offers to be her wing woman and help her navigate the dating scene, Josslyn is hesitant but hard-pressed to argue with Kate’s track record. Aleks Mitchell sets up the friends-to-lovers dynamic with real comic specificity—the person least qualified to help, most qualified by experience, and most inconvenient to fall for. 💕
The pivot that drives the romance is Josslyn’s realization that maybe what she needs isn’t to find the right person but to stop looking entirely—and who better to learn the art of not getting attached from than Kate herself. The two women take their relationship to the next level, and everything proceeds to go downhill from there in the best possible way. Mitchell handles the shift from antagonism through tactical alliance to something neither of them planned for with the tonal control that this kind of setup requires—funny without being lightweight, emotional without being overwrought. 😂
The double feelings revelation—Josslyn not the only one catching them—is deployed with the timing that makes the slow-burn payoff feel genuinely earned rather than mechanically assembled. Mitchell gives both characters enough specific history and enough specific resistance that the eventual convergence lands with real weight. The f/f romance genre has a devoted and growing readership, and this series opener delivers exactly what the best entries in the space offer: genuine character work, real humor, and a love story that feels like it couldn’t have happened with anyone else. 🌈
Why this pulls you in: The biggest player in town as a wing woman, a woman who decides to stop looking for love, and two hearts that didn’t get the memo—I Want It All With You is friends-to-lovers romance with genuine comic soul.
Lord Alistair Bevan, Viscount Farnham, has the weight of his family’s future pressing down on him—his father’s health is failing, the duty to marry and produce an heir is becoming unavoidable, and he knows with absolute certainty that a traditional life is not for him. Joe Logan came to London to find his missing sister Lily, and months of searching have yielded nothing except the disturbing discovery that other children are disappearing too. Merry Farmer opens the Brotherhood series at the intersection of these two very different crises, and the result is historical gay romance with genuine plot architecture beneath the love story. 🎩
The Brotherhood—an underground organization dedicated to helping the gay community in Victorian London—provides the world-building framework that gives the series its identity. Finding it changes both men’s lives: Alistair discovers a community that can hold his truth without destroying him, and Joe discovers an investigative network with resources his solo search has lacked. Farmer uses the organization to ground the romance in the specific historical reality of what it meant to be gay in this era—not just socially complicated but criminally dangerous—without letting the danger overwhelm the warmth. 🔍
The mystery of the missing children, which turns out to be connected to people close to Alistair’s own family, gives the romance its external stakes and forces both men into a collaboration that goes well beyond the personal. Farmer balances the developing relationship with the investigation with the structural confidence of a writer who has built a substantial readership in historical romance and knows how to keep multiple story engines running simultaneously. The Brotherhood series has become one of the more beloved franchises in Victorian gay romance. 💙
Why this draws you in: A viscount who can’t live the life expected of him, a man searching for his missing sister, an underground network, and a love story with genuine historical stakes—Just a Little Wickedness is Victorian gay romance at its most richly plotted.
Five years ago, Clayton Rorick said he loved her. It turned out what he wanted was her father’s company—and once he had it, she ran with nothing but the clothes on her back. The narrator of the King Family series opener has spent five years rebuilding her life and maintaining a very clean distance from the man who broke her heart. Then her father dies, her sisters are in desperate trouble, and the only person with the resources to help them is Clayton. Molly O’Keefe opens the series with a second-chance romance setup that has genuine emotional stakes baked into the premise from the very first sentence. 💔
The power dynamic is the engine the novel runs on—she has to beg, he has leverage, and what he wants in return is not just her cooperation but her heart and soul alongside it. O’Keefe handles the dynamic with the sophistication that distinguishes her work: Clayton’s position isn’t simply villainous, and the narrator’s feelings for him aren’t simply hatred wrapped around suppressed love. The five years have done things to both of them that a straightforward enemies-to-lovers setup wouldn’t capture. The family saga framework gives the romance real world stakes—these aren’t just two people’s feelings, they’re the fate of multiple people who depend on getting this right. 🔥
O’Keefe has a large and devoted readership that has followed her across multiple pen names and multiple series, and the King Family opener demonstrates why: the emotional intelligence is genuine, the writing has real heat, and the plot moves with the propulsive momentum of someone who understands that romance readers come for both the feeling and the story. The series that follows from this first volume has the kind of interconnected family world that rewards long investment. ⭐
Why this hooks you: The man who ruined her life has everything she needs to save her family, and what he wants in return is everything she swore never to give him again—The Tycoon is second-chance romance with real emotional fire.
Balancing two jobs with solo parenting leaves approximately zero time for anything resembling a personal life, which is fine—the narrator of the Single Dads Club opener has made his peace with that. When his son’s scout troop needs a co-leader, he steps up. The problem is Russ: Mr. Sexy Widower, #DadGoals to every other parent at drop-off, and the specific person who got him booted from the Parent Teacher Association. Stuck up, controlling, and infuriatingly attractive in a khaki uniform. A.J. Truman sets up the enemies-to-lovers dynamic in a setting—competitive single parenting—that generates friction with beautiful naturalistic logic. 🏕️
The slow reveal of the caring man underneath Russ’s cold exterior is handled with real patience. Truman resists the temptation to flip the switch too early, letting the working relationship accumulate small moments of genuine collaboration before either character acknowledges that the person they can’t stand has become the person they can’t stop thinking about. The scout troop format—regular forced proximity, shared responsibility, situations that require actual teamwork under pressure—is the perfect container for this kind of slow burn. 😂
Both men have sworn off romance to focus on their kids, which is both the primary obstacle and the primary source of the novel’s emotional credibility. These aren’t men playing at the idea of not falling in love—they genuinely mean it, and they’ve genuinely organized their lives around it. The tent scene does what it’s supposed to do, but the novel earns it through the sustained work of building two characters whose resistance is real enough that the collapse of that resistance actually means something. 💙
Why this wins you over: Two single dads, one scouting troop, a mutual grudge, one small tent, and two men who absolutely swore they weren’t going to do this—The Falcon and the Foe is enemies-to-lovers romance with genuine warmth and real comic timing.
Julia South-Brown agrees to bake a showstopping cake for a mysterious party thrown by a flashy couple. She expects chaos in the kitchen. What she gets is a millionaire host dead behind a locked door in the cinema room. By book 34 of the Peridale Cafe series, Agatha Frost has refined the cozy mystery formula to a precise and reliable art—and the secrets spilling out of this particular locked-room situation are constructed with the layered plotting that has earned the series its large and devoted global readership. 🍰
The web of secrets is elaborate and entertainingly specific: stolen lottery tickets, fake pregnancies, and secret affairs connecting Fern Moore’s council estates to glass mansions—a class contrast that gives the mystery its social texture alongside its plot mechanics. The range of suspects is drawn with Frost’s characteristic wit: jittery teenagers, eccentric B&B owners, and suave financiers who may be significantly less charming than their presentation suggests. Julia and her daughter Jessie investigating together gives the novel its warm family dynamic that runs alongside the darker material. 🔍
Agatha Frost is one of the most prolific and consistently reviewed authors in the British cozy mystery space, and the Peridale Cafe series is her flagship—a village community that has become as familiar to longtime readers as their own neighborhoods. The 34th entry demonstrates exactly why readers keep coming back: the plotting is tight, the humor is consistent, and the sense of a fully inhabited world in which each new mystery reveals another layer of community life gives the series a cumulative pleasure that standalone mysteries can’t replicate. ☕
Why this entertains: A showstopping cake commission, a dead millionaire behind a locked door, stolen lottery tickets, fake pregnancies, and a community where every secret has consequences—Peridale cozy mystery at its most compulsively readable.
By Starlight
Colton, Montana, 1931. Maddy Aldridge is running an illegal speakeasy to save her family’s mercantile store from the Depression’s devastation—keeping her dangerous business partner at arm’s length with a bravery born of necessity. Then Jack Rucker comes home. He left seven years ago with a promise to return so they could marry, and he didn’t keep it. Dorothy Garlock sets the stage for one of her signature second-chance romances with the Depression-era western atmosphere she rendered better than almost any other author in the genre. 🌾
The complication that makes Jack’s return something more than simple contrition is what he can’t tell her: he’s a Prohibition agent working an undercover assignment, and his presence in Colton is professional as much as personal. The dramatic irony—Maddy trusting the wrong people while the one person who might protect her is actively deceiving her about his identity and purpose—gives the romance genuine tension that goes beyond the emotional estrangement between them. Two people keeping secrets from each other while trying to rebuild trust is exactly the kind of setup that Garlock handled with real psychological precision. 🔍
Garlock was one of the most beloved authors in American historical romance for decades, and *By Starlight* demonstrates the qualities that earned her that reputation: a specific sense of place and period, protagonists defined by genuine strength under genuine hardship, and a love story grounded in real history rather than historical backdrop. The Prohibition setting gives the novel its plot mechanics and its moral complexity—Maddy’s illegal speakeasy and Jack’s undercover assignment put them on opposite sides of the law in ways that have to be resolved before anything else can be. 💙
Why this endures: A Depression-era speakeasy, a broken promise, and the Prohibition agent who came back to make things right—Dorothy Garlock at her atmospheric, emotionally resonant best.
One cold night in April, Natasha Williams’ father drove his car into the frigid water of New York Bay with her two-year-old half-sister in the backseat. Both survived. The headline in the *Daily News* read: Back from a Watery Grave. Natasha was the one who walked him past the column of reporters demanding explanations. That image—a daughter shielding a mentally ill father from public consumption of his worst moment—is the one the memoir keeps returning to: the particular love of someone who has spent a lifetime protecting and being damaged by the same person. 💙
The gritty New York City of the 1970s is not merely backdrop but atmosphere—a specific urban world that shaped both the family’s circumstances and its survival strategies. Williams grew up navigating her father’s schizophrenia in an era before the mental health resources and language that exist today, in a city that was itself in a kind of breakdown. The intersection of personal and civic instability gives the memoir its texture: this is not just a family story but a story about what a city and an era do to the most vulnerable people within them. 🌆
Williams draws on the tradition of *Hurry Down Sunshine* and *Hidden Valley Road*—memoirs that approach mental illness in a family with the rigor of reportage and the intimacy of lived experience—while finding her own specific register for what her father’s illness meant to her. The title’s central question—what do you keep, what do you release, from a parent whose love and whose damage were inseparable?—is one that the memoir answers with hard-won emotional honesty rather than resolution. At $0.99 this is one of the most significant bargains on today’s list. 📖
Why this endures: A daughter navigating her father’s schizophrenia in 1970s New York—what she kept of him, what it cost, and how much love survives damage that enormous.
Kate Blunt is the veterinarian in charge of a Cape Cod animal shelter, which means her professional life is entirely devoted to finding homes for dogs who need them. Her personal life has a different rule: her son Jasper, who has cystic fibrosis, cannot have a dog. The daily medical routine that keeps him alive is complicated enough without adding animal care to the equation. Kate has held this line firmly, as single mothers making hard calls for sick children do. Nick Trout establishes the central conflict with the emotional honesty that makes literary fiction about illness genuinely moving rather than manipulative. 🐕
Whistler arrives at the shelter as a scarred, mistreated wreck of a dog—too old, too damaged, not remotely adoptable by any reasonable metric. He is very much a lost cause. And then he meets Jasper, and something happens that neither logic nor veterinary experience can fully account for. The bond that forms between a boy who fights for every breath and a dog that nobody else wants is rendered with the restraint that this kind of material requires: Trout, a veterinarian himself, writes animal-human connection without sentimentality, which paradoxically makes it more affecting. 💙
The ticking clock operates on two levels—Jasper’s health, and Whistler’s uncertain future in the shelter—and Trout manages both with the structural confidence of a writer who understands that a good novel about mortality should earn its emotion through character and specificity rather than engineering it through circumstance. The Cape Cod setting is rendered with warmth and detail, and Kate’s professional context gives the novel a layer of real-world veterinary texture. *The Wonder of Lost Causes* is exactly what its title suggests: a book about the cases that shouldn’t work out, and sometimes do. 🌟
Why this moves you: A boy who fights for every breath, a damaged dog nobody else would take, and a mother who drew a firm line that Whistler simply walked through—The Wonder of Lost Causes earns every emotion it delivers.
Edward Westover, Duke of Strathmore, has taken possession of his enemy’s estate, which means everything that enemy held dear now belongs to him—including the man’s daughter. His plan is brisk and entirely reasonable: hire a governess, arrange a dowry, offer reassurances, depart. He arrives expecting a child and finds Kate Benton, a grown woman who is neither grateful nor manageable, and who has absolutely no intention of accepting his authority over her life or her home. Anna Harrington opens the Secret Life of Scoundrels series with the adversarial romance’s most satisfying variation: a man whose practical plan encounters a woman who was not part of it. 🏰
Kate’s counteroffensive—doing everything in her power to convince this arrogant, infuriating man to leave her and Brambly House alone—is the engine the first act runs on, and Harrington gives her enough specific ingenuity and genuine wit that the resistance never feels like mere obstacle-setting. Edward is initially the embodiment of aristocratic presumption, and the gradual discovery of the kindness and passionate nature underneath his cool facade is handled with the patience that Regency romance at its best brings to the slow burn. ⚔️
Harrington is a consistently strong presence in the historical romance space, and this series opener demonstrates the qualities that have earned her devoted readership: period detail that feels genuinely researched, protagonists with enough internal complexity that their eventual convergence requires real character development rather than circumstantial convenience, and the kind of sustained wit that makes spending time in a Regency drawing room genuinely pleasurable. The Secret Life of Scoundrels series rewards continued investment. 🌹
Why this draws you in: A duke who arrives expecting to manage a child and finds a woman who refuses to be managed—Dukes Are Forever is Regency enemies-to-lovers romance with real spark.
Jack Hamilton has a broken collarbone and no patience for visitors when the Reverend Dr. Bramley and his daughter arrive on his doorstep in obvious financial distress. They’ve clearly left their previous situation under a cloud, Cressida’s reputation in tatters, and while Jack would prefer solitude and recovery, turning away people who are practically penniless is not something his nature permits. Elizabeth Rolls establishes Jack’s essential character in that single decision—a man who would rather be left alone but finds he cannot look away from genuine need. The Regency romance framework gives the premise its social stakes immediately. 🎩
When Jack learns the true reason for the Bramleys’ flight and the real source of Cressida’s ruined reputation, his chivalrous nature takes over with the momentum of something that has been waiting for a worthy cause. The question the novel then carefully develops—is he in need of a wife?—is framed as a practical consideration but functions as an emotional one, and Rolls handles the gap between what Jack tells himself and what his behavior reveals with the dry wit that Victorian romance does particularly well. 🌹
Rolls writes with the historical grounding and character specificity that distinguishes Regency romance that rewards rereading from Regency romance that simply passes pleasantly. Cressida is a heroine whose circumstances have given her genuine resilience alongside genuine vulnerability, and the dynamic between her hard-won self-possession and Jack’s instinct to protect is more interesting than the genre’s standard beauty-meets-rake setup. The chivalry of the title is earned rather than performed, and that distinction matters considerably to how the resolution lands. ⭐
Why this charms: A rake with a broken collarbone, a woman with a ruined reputation and nowhere to go, and a man who discovers that chivalry has made the decision for him—The Chivalrous Rake is Regency romance with real character depth.
Captain John W. Thomason fought with the Marines in France during the First World War, and *Fix Bayonets!* is his firsthand account of what that meant at the ground level—not the strategic picture, not the political context, but the specific experience of men in trenches facing German rifle fire, managing starvation and fatigue, and doing the particular work that the phrase “Semper Fidelis” was meant to describe. Published in 1926, it is widely considered one of the essential Marine Corps texts and one of the finest personal accounts of combat to emerge from the Great War. 🎖️
Thomason was also a gifted illustrator, and *Fix Bayonets!* combines his prose accounts with his drawings—a combination that gives the book a visual dimension unusual in war memoir and that brings the faces and postures of the men he describes into immediate physical presence. The drawings are not heroic in the conventional sense: they capture exhaustion, grimness, and the particular body language of men doing dangerous work under brutal conditions, which makes them honest in a way that formal military art rarely achieves. 🖋️
The literary quality of the prose distinguishes this from mere soldierly reminiscence—Thomason writes with enough craft that the book was praised by Ernest Hemingway, who recognized a kindred spirit in its economy and its refusal to ornament suffering with sentimentality. The individual stories of Marines—their bravery and their gallantry and the camaraderie that sustained them—are rendered with the specificity that only a witness can provide. For anyone with an interest in WWI, the Marine Corps, or simply in great war writing, this is a discovery worth making at $1.99. ⭐
Why this endures: A Marine who was there, writing with genuine craft about men who lived and died by Semper Fidelis—Fix Bayonets! is one of the essential firsthand accounts of the Great War.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











