It starts with a drunken text photo sent to the wrong number—the flirty hotel bartender never receives it, but the stranger who does actually responds, and what follows is a night of unexpectedly hot back-and-forth that seems like the perfect way to blow off steam while closing a major business deal in New York. The problem: the man on the other end of those texts turns out to be Wells Grange, the most controlling, egotistical, emotionless person he has ever encountered in a boardroom. Lucy Lennox and Molly Maddox open the After Oscar series with the gay romance premise that gives the enemies-to-lovers dynamic its most productively embarrassing starting position. 💙
The specific tension—spending days squaring off against Wells professionally while succumbing nightly to the commanding texts of the stranger he doesn’t yet know is Wells—gives the novel its sustained comedic and romantic engine. Lennox and Maddox develop the dramatic irony with the timing it requires: the reader knows what the protagonist doesn’t, and the gap between his two experiences of the same man gives the romance its specific pleasure. 💕
Lennox is one of the most beloved authors in gay romance, with a massive devoted readership that has followed her work across many series for the combination of genuine heat, sharp wit, and the emotional depth that distinguishes her work from the lighter end of the romantic comedy spectrum. Maddox’s collaboration brings additional comedic sensibility to a premise that is already working at maximum productive awkwardness. For readers new to Lennox’s work, this is an excellent and very entertaining entry point. ⭐
Why this entertains: A wrong-number text, a night of unexpectedly hot messages with a stranger, and the morning discovery that the stranger is the most insufferable man in his boardroom—IRL is gay romantic comedy built on a spectacularly awkward premise.
Evelyn Sinclair communicates with the dead through her drawings—a dangerous secret she has learned to keep hidden because no one believes her. When a young woman is murdered and the only witness left behind is already dead, Evelyn comes forward with details she couldn’t possibly know by any conventional means. Detective Leo Ricci trusts evidence, not ghosts, and has two choices: dismiss her, or follow a lead that defies everything he believes. Kat Shehata opens the Evelyn and Leo series with the romantic suspense premise that gives the paranormal element its specific investigative function rather than using it as decoration. 🔍
The specific tension of the developing investigation—Evelyn’s visions growing stronger and more dangerous as the case deepens, the killer not just hiding but actively watching her—gives the romantic suspense its dual threat structure. The professional dynamic between a by-the-book detective who built his credibility on evidence and an artist whose information comes from sources he cannot acknowledge is handled with real intelligence: Leo’s credibility is at stake every time he acts on what Evelyn tells him. 💙
Shehata writes the Evelyn and Leo series with the combination of supernatural atmosphere, genuine thriller momentum, and romantic tension that gives paranormal romantic suspense its specific appeal when it’s working well. The dead communicating through Evelyn’s drawings gives the series its distinctive visual motif, and the killer’s awareness of Evelyn’s role gives the threat its specific personal dimension—she is not just a witness but a target. For readers who want their romantic suspense with a genuinely original paranormal premise, this is a series worth starting. ⭐
Why this hooks you: An artist who communicates with the dead through her drawings, a skeptical detective who has to decide whether to follow leads he can’t explain, and a killer who knows she’s watching—Drawn to Death is paranormal romantic suspense with a genuinely original premise.
Jenna Stack’s terrible day begins with dumping her cheating boyfriend, continues with moving in with her best friend Dave, and accelerates sharply when she accepts a job with his high-end pet-sitting service and Max the bulldog drags her into the middle of a brutal mugging. What looked like bad luck turns out to be the entry point to an international conspiracy, and suddenly the twenty-six-year-old criminology student is an unwitting target in a high-stakes cat-and-mouse with assassins who know she exists. Hanna Wren opens the Jenna Stack Mysteries with the amateur sleuth premise that delivers its thriller escalation from the very first dog walk. 🔍
The supporting cast surrounding Jenna as she navigates the conspiracy—a brilliant professor, a handsome client, a hipster hacker, an arrogant cop, and an enigmatic FBI agent—gives the novel its specific New York social texture and its varying degrees of useful interference. Wren develops the international intrigue with the pace and wit that the cozy-thriller hybrid requires: light enough to be fun, tense enough to be genuinely propulsive, and with a protagonist whose criminology training gives her investigative instincts a plausible professional grounding. 💙
The glittering world of New York society provides the specific atmosphere that distinguishes the Jenna Stack Mysteries within the amateur sleuth space—the pet-sitting service as an entry point into wealthy households is an inventive variation on the standard cozy mechanism. Wren writes with the wit and propulsive energy that has built the series a devoted readership. For readers who want their cozy mysteries to move at thriller pace without losing the warmth, this is a series worth starting. ⭐
Why this hooks you: A criminology student, a high-end pet-sitting job, a bulldog named Max who drags her into a brutal mugging, and an international conspiracy that suddenly knows her name—The Deadliest Lead is cozy thriller at its most entertainingly propulsive.
The Daisy Chain Flower Shop
Daisy has been unlucky in love for long enough that it barely surprises her anymore—what does surprise her is that Mayor Kelly’s vision declaring her flower shop cursed has been bad for business. Elliot is new to Dream Harbor and still adjusting to small-town life after his own relationship wreckage. He has been deliberately avoiding the Daisy Chain Flower Shop on the grounds that he doesn’t need any additional bad luck. Then he walks through the door anyway. Laurie Gilmore opens *The Daisy Chain Flower Shop* with the small-town romance premise that stacks its obstacles with cheerful creativity. 🌸
The cursed flower shop is the kind of small-town detail that gives the Dream Harbor world its specific flavor—a mayor with visions is a community feature rather than a plot device, and Gilmore uses it with the warmth and whimsy that distinguishes her small-town romance from the more straightforward variety. The fake relationship dynamic gives the novel its romantic mechanics alongside the small-town mystery, and the guaranteed HEA is delivered with the genuine earned warmth that Gilmore’s readership has come to trust. 💕
Gilmore is the author of the Dream Harbor series, which has developed a devoted readership for the specific combination of cozy small-town atmosphere, romantic comedy wit, and the kind of light mystery element that gives the romance its forward momentum without tipping into thriller territory. *The Daisy Chain Flower Shop* delivers all of those qualities as a new release, and the Dream Harbor world has the accumulated community warmth of a series that has genuinely built its fictional town across multiple books. ⭐
Why this charms: A cursed flower shop, a mayor with visions, a woman unlucky in love, and a newcomer who walks through the door he’d been carefully avoiding—Laurie Gilmore’s Dream Harbor small-town romance with a guaranteed happy ending.
Lily, Ana, and Margot have been best friends since their first year of college, when Hawthorne Res Life assigned them as roommates. Ten years later, all three lives look good from the outside: Lily planning her wedding to the supportive, symmetrical Jack; Ana teaching fourth grade at a prestigious school while her long-term boyfriend has finally asked her to move in; Margot about to land a life-changing promotion. Phoebe Thompson opens *Girls Our Age* with the women’s literary fiction premise that the surface of a life is never quite what’s underneath, and that close female friendships are precisely where that gap becomes impossible to maintain indefinitely. 💙
When the three friends converge on Maine for Lily’s wedding, the private struggles each has been managing alone begin to surface. Thompson develops the moment of convergence with real structural intelligence—the wedding as the occasion that forces honesty not because it’s a dramatic device but because proximity and vulnerability finally make the usual distances impossible. The risks each woman has taken to protect herself and the people she loves give the novel its genuine stakes alongside its portrait of friendship. 🌊
Thompson writes women’s literary fiction with the emotional precision and bittersweet warmth that the best work in this space delivers—the novel honors both the specific pleasures of female friendship and the specific loneliness of keeping things hidden from the people who know you best. *Girls Our Age* has received strong early praise as a new release for exactly this quality: a debut that understands what its characters are actually carrying. ⭐
Why this resonates: Three college roommates ten years on, lives that look good from outside, and a Maine wedding where everything they’ve been keeping from each other finally surfaces—Girls Our Age is women’s literary fiction with real emotional precision.
Spring is giving way to summer in Holiday Bay, Maine, and the highlight of the season is the much-anticipated three-day cookoff hosted by beloved chef Georgia Carter Peyton. After the chaos of her last event, Georgia is determined to deliver a flawless competition—and for a while it looks like she might pull it off. Then one of the contestants turns up dead. Kathi Daley opens this Inn at Holiday Bay entry with the amateur sleuth premise that gives the cozy mystery its specific seasonal pleasure: a Maine coastal summer, a community event, and a murder that disrupts both. 🔍
The investigation throws up an obvious suspect immediately—a hot-headed local seen arguing with the victim hours before the murder, who also took a swing at Abby when she tried to intervene. Motive and opportunity are both firmly in place. Abby isn’t convinced it’s that simple, and the novel’s engine is her determination to look past the obvious answer to whatever the actual truth is. Daley develops the Holiday Bay community with the warmth and specificity that a long-running series accumulates across many volumes. 💙
Daley is one of the cozy mystery genre’s most prolific and widely read authors, with a massive devoted readership that has followed the Inn at Holiday Bay series for the combination of Maine coastal atmosphere, the ensemble community she has built across many books, and Abby’s specific investigative sensibility—methodical, community-rooted, and skeptical of easy answers. As a new release this delivers all of those established series qualities in a summer setting that gives the novel its specific seasonal warmth. ⭐
Why this entertains: A Maine summer cookoff, one dead contestant, an obvious suspect who is probably too obvious, and Abby’s refusal to close the case before she knows the actual truth—Kathi Daley’s Inn at Holiday Bay cozy mystery series continues in fine form.





