It’s 2095, and the bill for a century of bad decisions has come fully due. Sea levels rose fifty feet. Hurricanes and crippling drought reshaped the country into something unrecognizable. The government that was supposed to hold everything together made choices that accelerated the collapse rather than preventing it. What remains of Brooklyn is just another place where surviving takes everything you have, and where ambition is either the most dangerous thing you can possess or the only thing worth having—depending entirely on how it gets aimed. 🌊
Riley is done. Done with her mother, done with the grinding poverty, done with the hunger that has become so constant it barely registers as a feeling anymore. Her best friend Alex tells her not to join the Service—the brutal four-year program that promises money on the other side but delivers death to four out of every five candidates who sign up. Alex is not wrong about the statistics. Riley has looked at the statistics. She has also looked at every other available option, and the Service is still the one with the best math. 😰
One in five survives the full term. One in five collects the payout that makes the nightmare worth enduring. Riley has survived everything her life has thrown at her so far on nothing but stubbornness and the refusal to accept that the odds apply to her personally. She intends to be the one. Whether what waits on the other side of four years is actually worth the cost is a question she’ll answer when she gets there. 💪
What makes this compelling: J.B. Cantwell builds a vivid, fully realized near-future dystopia from the ground up—a scrappy, fiercely determined heroine, a world that feels like a plausible extension of present failures, and a series opener that establishes its stakes immediately and never lets them go. 🚀
Rose Lambert grew up surrounded by Ottawa society—a world that valued her family’s name and connections far more than it valued anything about her as an individual. She had learned to smile through it, but when her fiancé destroys her reputation and leaves her with nothing but the urgent need to be somewhere else entirely, she makes a decision. She is going west, to a place where a woman might actually have a say in her own life, where what her family once was means nothing, and where she can start becoming whoever she chooses to be. 🌾
Elijah Thorpe had decided, firmly and on principle, that marrying a woman wasn’t fair to her. He was a Mountie. The work was dangerous. A widow was a real possibility, and he had no interest in creating one. Then the formidable Miss Hazel Hughes decided the matter was not actually his to decide, and before Elijah fully understood what had happened, there was a woman traveling across the country to British Columbia to become his bride. She is not remotely what he expected in any respect, which he considers immediately upon meeting her. 🏔️
Two people who didn’t entirely choose this situation, building something fragile and honest one awkward, careful moment at a time. Then the past catches up—as it always does—and the foundation they have been quietly constructing together faces a test that neither of them saw coming and both of them will have to decide whether to fight for. 💔
What makes this heartwarming: Kay P. Dawson delivers a classic mail-order bride western romance with genuine warmth, a slow-burn that earns every beat, and two characters who find considerably more in each other than either bargained for—set against the rugged, gorgeous sweep of frontier British Columbia. 🌅
Jed Hamilton is ex-special forces, currently working as an undercover recovery agent, and constitutionally, almost pathologically allergic to anything involving commitment, permanence, or the entire category of wedding-related events. So when he discovers—standing in the very elegant bridal salon of the most compelling woman he has encountered in years—that his younger sister is getting married and wants him as her man of honor, the situation is already testing his limits. The fact that McKenna Dixon keeps looking at him the way she does is not helping. 💍
McKenna has a type, and the type is exactly Jed Hamilton. She also has the history to prove that her type is reliably terrible for her, which is why she has developed a firm and sensible policy about men who look like trouble wrapped in a well-fitted jacket. The policy is based on hard-won experience. She intends to follow it. Then a threat surfaces against her and her daughter, and Jed appoints himself their protector with the calm certainty of a man who has decided something and considers the matter closed. 🛡️
He tells himself it’s temporary—just until the danger passes. She tells herself proximity is not the same as vulnerability. They are both telling themselves things that Cape Town’s beauty and enforced closeness are making increasingly difficult to believe. He is not the commitment-phobic lone wolf he keeps insisting he is. She is not as protected by her policy as she thought. Neither of them is remotely as good at self-deception as they need to be. 🌍
What makes this addictive: Joss Wood writes romantic suspense with sharp wit, genuine tension, and chemistry that crackles from the opening scene—a bad boy hero who doesn’t yet know he’s ready to change, and a heroine who knows exactly what she wants and is furious that it keeps being him. ❤️🔥
No Place To Be Single
In the tiny Tuscan wine town of Belvedere—where nothing ever happens, and especially not for single women—financial investor Michael D’Arcy returns after sixteen years to settle his late grandfather’s estate and leave as quickly as possible. He’s handsome, eligible, and the immediate target of every swooning mother, daughter, and sister in town. Every one of them, that is, except local vintner Elisa Benetti. 🍷
Elisa and Michael were cherished childhood friends. The Michael she remembers was warm, joyful, and full of life. The one who just stepped off the plane is arrogant, dismissive, money-obsessed, and clearly counting the days until he can get back to London. She is not impressed—and unlike everyone else in Belvedere, she has absolutely no problem saying so directly to his face. 🌿
But old friendships carry long memories, and old promises don’t simply dissolve with time. Behind the expensive suit and the cold efficiency, Elisa occasionally catches a glimpse of the boy she used to know—and starts to wonder if it’s too late to find him again. Maybe neither of them is quite who the other remembers. Maybe that’s actually the point. 💛
What makes this charming: A bestselling sensation in Italy, Felicia Kingsley’s sparkling romantic comedy blends sun-drenched Tuscan atmosphere, sharp wit, and a second-chance story with genuine warmth—irresistible for fans of witty, sun-soaked European rom-coms with real emotional heart. 🌻
One viral video ends her career as a fashion influencer and leaves her stranded in the Scottish Highlands with no plan, no backup, and very inappropriate footwear. She finds shelter at Lochview Sheep Farm—which is decidedly not the luxury spa she originally booked, but does come with three rugged, unexpectedly attentive Scots who seem determined to make her stay. 🏴
Cameron is the grumpy shepherd who calls her “princess” every time her heels sink into the mud—right before he carries her inside without being asked. Fraser is the flirty rancher with the auburn hair who promises to wear his kilt just for her and means it. Alec is the commanding farm manager whose cold exterior cracks completely the moment a storm rolls in and his protective instincts take over. 🌧️
All three assume she’s just a clueless city girl who’ll be gone by morning. Then they find out what she’s actually running from—and everything shifts. Suddenly all three Scots are united in one purpose: keeping her safe, warm, and thoroughly spoiled for as long as she’ll let them. 🔥
What makes this irresistible: Lily Gold delivers a why-choose Highland romance with genuine heart, real humor, and heat that builds steadily throughout—the grumpy-sunshine dynamic tripled and perfected, with a heroine who earns every bit of the happiness that’s coming her way. 💛
So the Pickett daughters take matters into their own hands. Sheridan, April, and Lucy split up—each daughter taking a different road to a different ranch, each investigating a different family—working against time to find out who shot their father before whoever did it decides to finish the job. 🌄
What makes this a standout: C.J. Box puts the entire Pickett family front and center in an emotionally charged, propulsive thriller set against Wyoming’s stunning landscape—a race against time with genuine stakes and a family dynamic that has been building for twenty-six books. 🎯





