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Author: Joely Sue Burkhart
FREE
Paranormal Vampire Romance

Karmen wakes in a dark alley with no memory of what happened to her or who she is—just her name, the vicious scars covering her body, and the certainty that she has been through something terrible. In the hospital, fragments of memory begin returning, along with one clear understanding: something is hunting her, it isn’t safe, and she cannot trust the man who left her in the alley. He smelled like a wolf. The doctor asking if she’s even human is somehow not the most alarming part of the situation. Joely Sue Burkhart opens the Their Vampire Queen universe with maximum disorientation and genuine tension. 🌑

The revelation that Karmen is pregnant—with no memory of the father, only the knowledge that his monsters hunt her in broad daylight—reframes the entire opening sequence. Burkhart builds the mystery of Karmen’s identity and her circumstances with real craft, parceling information carefully enough that each revelation raises new questions rather than simply providing answers. The paranormal world-building is introduced through Karmen’s fractured perspective, which keeps the mythology from front-loading and gives it the atmospheric quality of something being uncovered rather than explained. 🩸

As a prequel to the Their Vampire Queen series, this entry point is designed to establish Karmen’s voice and circumstances before the larger mythology engages—it functions both as a standalone introduction and as the foundation for the series to build on. Burkhart writes paranormal romance with the intensity of someone genuinely invested in the mythology rather than using it as set dressing, and Karmen’s combination of vulnerability and evident resilience makes her a protagonist worth following. 🌙

Why this pulls you in: A woman with no memory, scars from something terrible, monsters hunting her in daylight, and a pregnancy she can’t explain—Queen Takes Sunfires is paranormal vampire romance that opens at full throttle.

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Author: Russell Sullman
FREE
Historical World War II Fiction

Summer 1940. France has fallen. Britain stands alone, and the RAF—outnumbered and outgunned—is the only thing between the Luftwaffe and the invasion that everyone knows is coming. Pilot Officer Harry Rose arrives at Excalibur Squadron fresh from training, eager, green, and about to discover what aerial combat actually costs the people who fight it. Russell Sullman grounds the Battle of Britain narrative in one young pilot’s experience with the specificity that makes the best WWII historical fiction essential rather than merely informative. ✈️

The title is Churchill’s famous tribute—”Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few”—and Sullman takes the weight of those words seriously. Harry’s story is the story of the Few, told from the inside: the scrambles, the dogfights over southern England, the euphoria of surviving a kill, and the bitterness of watching friends dwindle in number until the mathematics of attrition become impossible to ignore. The human cost is rendered with unflinching specificity rather than abstracted patriotism. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

The love that Harry discovers alongside the combat gives the novel its emotional counterweight—something worth surviving for, placed in direct tension with the statistical probability that any given pilot won’t. Sullman handles this with real craft rather than using the romance as simple comfort: Harry knows what the numbers say, and loving someone in that context is its own kind of courage. The Harry Rose series has built a devoted readership in the WWII historical fiction space, and this first volume earns that loyalty. 🌹

Why this endures: A young RAF pilot, the summer that Britain stood alone, and the human cost of aerial combat rendered with complete emotional honesty—To So Few is Battle of Britain fiction at its most immersive.

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Author: Emily Silver
FREE
Contemporary Romance

She grew up hearing exactly one thing about the Hollins family: bad news, apple doesn’t fall far, stay away. Troy Hollins exists on the far side of a boundary she has never questioned—until senior year, when he comes to her for tutoring help. He needs a passing grade or loses his starting spot on the university’s hockey team. She knows she shouldn’t say yes. She says yes. Emily Silver builds the forbidden romance with the classic sports Romeo and Juliet architecture and gives it genuine warmth. 🏒

What starts as study sessions becomes something else through the accumulation of stolen moments and private conversations that slowly dismantle every assumption she has about him and his family. Silver is careful not to resolve the family feud premise too easily—the history between these families is treated as real rather than as a backdrop for the romance to overcome in a single dramatic scene, which gives the obstacles actual weight throughout. Troy’s situation is more complicated than the reputation that precedes him. 💙

The hidden relationship dynamic is handled with the kind of tension that only works when both characters have genuine reasons to keep the secret rather than simply external pressure—and Silver gives both protagonists enough internal conflict that the concealment feels specific to who they are rather than generically forbidden. The Colorado Black Diamonds series uses the collegiate hockey world to give the romance its specific social architecture, and the sports setting gives the story a competitive energy that runs through the relationship as well as the rink. 🏔️

Why this draws you in: Feuding sports families, forbidden tutoring sessions, stolen moments that change everything, and a hero whose reputation is the least interesting thing about him—Best Kept Secret is collegiate sports romance with real romantic heat.

This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me

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Author: Ilona Andrews
NEW RELEASE
Epic Fantasy

Maggie wakes up cold, filthy, naked in a gutter, and immediately recognizes where she is: Kair Toren, the city at the center of the famously unfinished dark fantasy series she has been obsessively rereading for years while waiting for the final novel. She knows the plot. She knows the characters’ ambitions and fates. She knows which warlords are dangerous, which alliances will betray, and how the story is supposed to end—in a cataclysmic war that kills most of the people she’s about to start caring about. Ilona Andrews launches Maggie the Undying with a premise that is both wildly inventive and deeply personal to anyone who has ever been wrecked by an unfinished series. 📚

The conceit is used with genuine sophistication. Maggie can’t be killed—the immortality is established and tested repeatedly—but the living, breathing characters around her absolutely can be, and her encyclopedic knowledge of their fictional fates gives her both tremendous advantage and tremendous anguish. Andrews is one of the most reliably excellent writers in fantasy fiction, and the Maggie the Undying setup allows her to play with reader-author-story relationships in ways that feel genuinely new rather than merely clever. 🗡️

The band she accumulates—a former lady’s maid, a deadly assassin, various outrageous magical creatures, a dangerously appealing soldier—gives the story the found-family warmth that Andrews handles better than almost anyone. The dueling princes, dukes, and villains whose schemes she’s enmeshed in give it the political complexity of the best epic fantasy. The central tension—can she save them from the ending she knows is coming?—gives the new release its emotional engine. ✨

Why this is essential: A reader transported into the unfinished dark fantasy she’s been obsessing over, armed with plot knowledge and unable to die—Ilona Andrews at her most inventive is a new release event.

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Author: Audrey Halliwell
NEW RELEASE
Left-at-the-Altar, Second Chance Romance

Mold forces the move into his parents’ mansion, which sounds minor until the Thompsons turn out to be exactly what their reputation suggests: cruel, precise, and very clear that she will never be acceptable to them regardless of the engagement ring on her finger. Amanda—the pliable perfect ex-fiancée his parents never stopped preferring—is a constant presence, and Skyler keeps the peace by saying nothing. Audrey Halliwell builds the tension of the pre-altar section with real psychological specificity. 💍

The betrayal at the center of the novel isn’t dramatic—it’s Skyler’s silence. He ignores the insults. He watches his mother dismantle her dreams. He allows his ex to take a front-row seat at the wedding. The gradual accumulation of these silences, each individually justifiable and collectively devastating, gives the left-at-the-altar moment genuine moral weight rather than the shock-value pivot it can be in lesser hands. She asked him to be a husband. He chose to be a dutiful son. The “No” she delivers at the altar is earned. 🌹

The second-chance arc—Skyler trading his inheritance for a basement apartment and a hammer, crawling back to prove he’s the man she needed—is handled with appropriate difficulty. Halliwell doesn’t allow the redemption to come cheaply, and the heroine’s refusal to become again the woman who would accept second place gives the romance its backbone. This is a new release left-at-the-altar story that understands why the altar moment happens and builds the second chance from that genuine understanding. 💔

Why this resonates: A fiancée who said no at the altar for the exact right reasons, a man who has to become someone genuinely different to deserve a second chance—Vows We Broke is a new release that earns its emotional payoff.

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Author: Aubree Pynn
NEW RELEASE
Urban Fiction

Remedy Worthy is barely keeping her head above water, carrying a past heavy enough to make the swimming nearly impossible. The thing that changes her trajectory is an unlikely one: her elderly neighbor Mr. Ernie becomes her best friend, and his encouragement gives her something to hold onto when the current feels too strong. Aubree Pynn grounds the Waynesville Love Story series in genuine community rather than manufactured romance setup—the friendship between Remedy and Mr. Ernie is the emotional center the novel is built around. 💛

Erys Moore spent fifteen years as a reaper—a career in violence he is ready to leave behind. Retirement is the plan. Then an old friend pulls him back to Waynesville, and a disturbing voicemail from his father changes the nature of the return before he’s even arrived. Erys is a man who has operated without emotional access for so long that being undone from the inside out feels genuinely disorienting. Pynn gives both protagonists enough interiority that the collision of their separate situations feels organic rather than engineered. 🌆

The unlikely pairing structure—Remedy and Erys brought together through Mr. Ernie’s connections—gives the romance a foundation in community and obligation rather than pure attraction, which gives the eventual emotional development more weight. Pynn is a distinctive voice in urban fiction, known for character work that goes deeper than the genre’s structural requirements, and this Waynesville series opener demonstrates exactly that quality. The question the novel poses—can this be the remedy for every wound or will it end in tragedy—is held genuinely open throughout. 🌹

Why this draws you in: A woman swimming against the current, a former reaper returning home, and an elderly neighbor whose friendship changes everything—His Remedy to the Madness is urban fiction with genuine heart.