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Haley Telfer is a college junior with a knack for code and a scholarship on the line when a chance internship lands her on the road with the biggest rockstar in the world. She never expected legendary bad boy Jax Jamieson to notice her, let alone make it his personal mission to torment her at every soundcheck. 🎸
Jax is older, jaded, and used to getting his way, and Haley rubbing him the wrong way on day one only seems to make things worse. But as the tour rolls on, the walls between intern and icon start to crack, revealing a man far more guarded than his headlines suggest. 🎤
Haley has secrets of her own, ones tied to the family she recently lost and the reasons she needs this job more than anyone knows. As the tension between them builds toward something neither can walk away from, Good Girl launches the addictive Wicked trilogy with a slow burn that fans call impossible to put down. 💔
Why this hooks: a nerdy heroine and a reckless rock god trade barbs on tour until the banter turns into something neither saw coming.
Tess has given up on finding Mr. Right, but that doesn’t mean she’s given up on love. When she reads about a young couple who lost everything, including four bridesmaids’ dresses, in a robbery, she can’t help but step in to help. ☕
That single act of kindness pulls her into the orbit of Logan Allen, a war correspondent home from Afghanistan and carrying more baggage than either of them realizes. Helping the bride means risking the secrets Tess has spent years keeping buried in her quiet Montana café life. 📰
As Logan’s own past threatens to resurface, Tess has to decide whether protecting herself is worth losing the one connection that finally feels real. Set in the cozy town of Bozeman, All of Me kicks off The Bridesmaids Club series with warmth, humor, and a cast of friends readers won’t want to leave. 💌
Why this comforts: a café owner’s small act of generosity turns into a second chance at love neither she nor a guarded ex-war correspondent saw coming.
Captain Nelson is on leave from the British Army when he gets the call no soldier is ever prepared for: a family member has been murdered. The search for answers pulls him straight into a brutal underworld of European gangs and corrupt police. ⚔️
What starts as personal grief quickly widens into something far bigger, a decades-old family secret that connects every thread of the case. MI6 Agent Pascoe is running her own high-stakes operation and realizes Nelson’s family holds the missing piece she needs. 🕵️
Nelson doesn’t operate inside the rules, which leaves Pascoe with an impossible choice: arrest him and lose her case, or throw out the rulebook and join him. With time running out, the two must learn to trust each other before the truth buries them both. 💣
Why this delivers: a grieving soldier and an MI6 agent with opposite methods team up to take down a criminal empire neither can survive alone.
Danna Carpenter took over as town marshal after her husband’s death, and she’s still fighting to earn the respect a Wyoming Territory town isn’t eager to give a woman in a man’s job. The last thing she needs is a tenderfoot detective getting underfoot. 🤠
Chas O’Grady has tracked cattle rustlers across half the country, but nothing has prepared him for the rugged canyons of Wyoming, or for a marshal who can outride and outshoot him. When the pair interrupt a bank robbery together, a compromising situation forces the town’s hand. 🔫
Suddenly bound in a marriage of convenience, Danna and Chas find their opposing worlds colliding at every turn, city manners against frontier grit. But as danger closes in around Wind River, the greatest risk may be letting down her guard long enough to fall in love. 💍
Why this charms: a lawless Wyoming canyon and a forced marriage bring together a no-nonsense marshal and the city detective who can’t quite keep up with her.
Abi Cook lives life on her own terms, working hard and playing harder without ever losing sight of what she wants. After yet another late-night run-in with Dr. Cade Carsen, the chemistry between them is impossible to ignore, one-night stand or not. 😏
Cade has a favor to ask: pose as his girlfriend for the length of his father’s mayoral campaign. It’s supposed to be simple, a little fake dating with a side of undeniable attraction, nothing more. Abi never turns down a challenge, especially not one this tempting. 🎭
But pretending gets complicated fast when real feelings start bleeding through the act, and neither of them signed up for actually falling for the other person in the arrangement. Faking Bliss follows two happily single people who set out for something casual and end up with something they never expected. 💕
Why this delights: a fake-dating favor between two commitment-averse singles turns genuinely, hilariously real.
Maggie Simpson has one summer left before college starts, and spending it in sleepy Green Falls, Texas, with her mother’s family was never the plan. But when her mom suddenly changes course and drags her along, Maggie finds herself stuck in a town she barely knows. 🎵
To pass the time and earn money for school, she lands a job at the local saloon, tasked with finding a band for the town’s Battle of the Bands. That’s where she meets Haden, a mysterious, tattooed stranger who agrees to help, and who changes everything about her summer. 🎸
As Maggie and Haden grow closer, secrets neither of them expected start to surface, ones that will force Maggie to question everything she thought she knew, about him and about why her family really brought her to Green Falls. Ruined By You is the first half of an unforgettable two-part story. 💔
Why this pulls you in: a small-town summer job and a mysterious tattooed stranger unravel secrets Maggie never saw coming.
Gamble in the Coral Sea
In May 1942, two carrier fleets that had never seen each other maneuvered across a stretch of the South Pacific in the first naval battle in history fought entirely by aircraft, with the ships themselves never coming within sight of one another. ⚓
Piegzik reconstructs the Battle of the Coral Sea hour by hour, drawing on operational records from both the American and Japanese sides to trace how a collision of code-breaking, carrier doctrine, and sheer improvisation stopped the Japanese advance on Port Moresby and set the stage for Midway a month later. The narrative moves between the flight decks, the ready rooms, and the command bridges, showing how green pilots and untested tactics collided with a Japanese navy still riding a string of early wartime victories. 🎖️
What distinguishes this account is its refusal to treat the battle as a simple American win—both fleets suffered crippling losses, and the tactical outcome was genuinely ambiguous even as the strategic result reshaped the Pacific War. Detailed order-of-battle appendices and newly translated Japanese sources give the account a level of granularity that traditional single-source histories rarely reach. 🗺️
Why this compels: Michal Piegzik delivers a meticulously sourced account of the first carrier-versus-carrier battle in naval history, where neither fleet ever saw the other and the entire fight was decided in the air. ⚔️
On paper, Kathleen “Kitty” Cargill has everything—a beautiful home, a devoted husband, three grown children who still call her every week. Friends describe her as very, very lucky, and Kitty has spent years agreeing with them. 🍀
Amanda Prowse builds her story around the quiet unraveling of that certainty, as a single unexpected event forces Kitty to look honestly at a marriage and a life she has never fully questioned. The novel moves gently but unflinchingly through grief, resentment, and the particular loneliness of being surrounded by people who assume you’re fine, tracing how Kitty rebuilds her sense of self from the inside out rather than waiting for circumstances to hand it back to her. 💔
Prowse has built a substantial following for exactly this kind of unsparing domestic fiction, one that trusts ordinary women’s interior lives to carry a novel without melodrama or contrivance. Readers of Jodi Picoult and Liane Moriarty will recognize the same instinct for turning a comfortable life inside out to see what’s really there. 🏡
Why this resonates: Amanda Prowse examines what happens when a woman everyone calls lucky is finally forced to ask whether her own life has ever truly belonged to her. 💫
Beneath the city’s tallest skyscraper sits a tower that shouldn’t exist—a vertical prison for supernatural criminals too dangerous for any ordinary cell, staffed by wardens who are barely less dangerous than the inmates. 🗼
Annabel Chase’s Midnight Empire series follows the reluctant guards and administrators who keep that tower running, mixing courtroom-style supernatural politics with the kind of fast, snarky banter that’s become her signature across dozens of urban fantasy series. This complete box set gathers the full run in one volume, letting readers move straight through the escalating threats—rogue witches, ancient pacts, and the tower’s own increasingly uncertain loyalties—without waiting between installments. 🔮
Chase has built a reputation as one of the most prolific voices in cozy-adjacent urban fantasy, and the Midnight Empire books lean into the genre’s pulpier pleasures: quick chapters, high stakes, and a found-family cast that keeps the emotional core intact even as the plots twist. Bundled together, the series reads less like six separate books and more like one long, propulsive serial. ⚡
Why this delivers: Annabel Chase bundles her complete Midnight Empire series into one set, following the wardens of a supernatural prison tower through escalating magical threats and their own uneasy loyalties. 🌙
Computer hacker Lexi Carmichael has talked her way out of plenty of trouble, but nothing quite prepares her for the fallout when a routine cybersecurity job pulls her into a conspiracy with a body count. 💻
Julie Moffett’s long-running Lexi Carmichael series has built its audience on a specific formula—genuinely clever technical detail paired with rapid-fire humor and a slow-burn will-they-won’t-they with her recurring love interest, Slash. No One Lives Twice keeps that balance intact, sending Lexi chasing a threat that reaches further into her own past than she expects, forcing her to question who around her can actually be trusted. 🕵️
Moffett’s background gives the hacking sequences a credibility that’s rare in the genre, and fans of the series return as much for Lexi’s voice—self-deprecating, quick, occasionally in over her head—as for the plotting itself. The romance subplot deepens without ever slowing the pace of the central mystery. 🔒
Why this hooks: Julie Moffett sends hacker heroine Lexi Carmichael chasing a conspiracy that reaches deeper into her own past than she bargained for, with her signature mix of tech-savvy plotting and sharp humor. 💥
In a remote village on the west coast of Ireland, a widower named Stephen Griffin has arranged his entire life around avoiding feeling anything too deeply—until a chance encounter with a girl at a concert threatens to undo decades of careful self-protection. 🎻
Niall Williams writes with the patient, incantatory prose style that has made him one of Ireland’s most distinctive literary voices, and As It Is in Heaven unfolds less like a conventional romance than a meditation on grief, faith, and the strange mercy of unexpected love arriving after a person has stopped believing in it. The novel’s rhythms are unhurried by design, trusting readers to sit with Stephen’s interior world as it slowly reopens. 🌧️
Williams has drawn frequent comparisons to Marilynne Robinson for his willingness to let spiritual questions breathe inside ordinary lives, and this early novel shows the roots of the lyrical style he’d later bring to acclaimed works like This Is Happiness. The Irish countryside itself becomes almost a character, shaping the story’s slow, weather-worn sense of time. ☘️
Why this moves: Niall Williams follows a grieving widower in rural Ireland whose careful emotional distance is undone by an unexpected love he’d stopped believing he deserved. 🕊️
As a hurricane bears down on the South Carolina Lowcountry, a scattered group of neighbors and family members find themselves sheltering together in one house, their carefully separate lives suddenly forced into the same rooms. 🌀
Mary Alice Monroe uses the storm less as a plot device than as a pressure test, drawing out old wounds between an estranged mother and daughter, a marriage quietly coming apart, and a group of near-strangers who discover they need each other more than they expected. Monroe’s writing carries her trademark environmental attentiveness—the Lowcountry’s marshes, tides, and wildlife are rendered with the same care as her characters, reflecting her long-standing engagement with coastal conservation themes. 🌊
Known for blending emotionally layered women’s fiction with a strong sense of place, Monroe gives even her secondary characters real interior lives, so that the ensemble cast never feels like scaffolding for the main story. The result is a novel about resilience that never oversimplifies what it costs. 🏖️
Why this comforts: Mary Alice Monroe gathers an unlikely household together as a hurricane approaches the Lowcountry, forcing old wounds and quiet resentments into the open under one roof. 🌤️
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 2Page 2











