Jack St. Claire is a grieving single father who has buried himself in work rather than grief—and the work, specifically, is running a brand-new kink club in Paris. He needs a nanny. Camille Aubert wasn’t looking for a job at all; she came to return a lost love letter she found tucked inside a book, was mistaken for a job candidate, and somehow ended up hired. Sara Cate is one of the leading voices in contemporary spicy romance, and the Salacious Legacy series opener demonstrates exactly why her readership is so devoted. 🇫🇷
The setup has the structured collision of a classic forbidden romance, but Cate gives it specific texture: Paris, a kink club, a man using work as emotional armor, and a woman who finds a mysterious room in the apartment that starts answering questions she didn’t know she was asking. The professional-to-personal line doesn’t blur so much as dissolve gradually, which is considerably more satisfying than a sudden crossing. Camille’s curiosity about Jack’s darker side is rendered as genuine rather than voyeuristic. 🌹
The emotional core is Jack’s grief—real, specific, and not resolved by the romance so much as cracked open by it. Cate is skilled at writing broken men whose damage is specific enough to feel human rather than generic, and the challenge Camille poses to his carefully constructed fortress is developed with real emotional intelligence. The kink element is handled with the same care—present and important to the story without overwhelming the character work that makes the romance meaningful. 🖤
Why this draws you in: A grieving father running a Parisian kink club, a nanny who found the job by accident, and a mysterious room that changes everything—The Good Girl Effect is Sara Cate delivering exactly what her readers love.
Rachel Richards knew something was wrong from the time she was in kindergarten—a sense of inner wrongness she couldn’t name or communicate, that expressed itself in ways that hurt her and confused everyone around her. This memoir takes readers inside the distorted thinking of anorexia from the earliest signs through decades of struggle, hospitalization, and the painstaking, nonlinear process of recovery. Richards writes with the kind of unflinching honesty that makes this book genuinely useful rather than merely affecting. 📖
The portrait of anorexia Richards offers refuses the common narrative simplifications. The illness isn’t presented as vanity or a desire for control in any simple sense—it’s rendered as a complex response to inner trauma that Richards herself couldn’t fully understand for years. The restrictive behavior gave her something she needed, and the book is careful to show why, rather than simply cataloguing the damage. At sixty-nine pounds, graduating college with honors through sheer driven perfectionism, Richards is a shell animated by obsessive behaviors—and she renders this state from the inside with devastating clarity. 💙
The theater thread—acting offering Rachel moments of genuine freedom from the skewed perceptions that controlled her daily life—gives the narrative a counterweight that never tips into false hope. Richards doesn’t resolve her story with a clean recovery arc; she shows the actual shape of what getting better looked like. For readers who have experienced eating disorders personally, or who love someone who has, this memoir offers something rare: a firsthand account that illuminates rather than simply testifies. If you’re personally struggling, please reach out to the National Alliance for Eating Disorders at 1-866-662-1235. 🌱
Why this matters: A firsthand account of anorexia from the inside—unflinching, specific, and written with the clarity of someone who survived it and wants others to understand what that survival actually required.
Pete’s food truck has two problems: an inexplicable smell of cat urine and a reputation for mystery meat that is charitable to describe as questionable. He was approximately one tortilla away from quitting when a physics experiment gone nuclear launched him into a time vortex. His companion for the journey is Clara, a brilliant physics student who has read every paper ever written on temporal mechanics and is deeply, audibly unimpressed by Pete’s pop culture references about it. Aaron Frale commits to the absurd premise without apology. 🌯
The itinerary that follows is gloriously unhinged: the Stone Age, where Pete befriends a prank-loving Neanderthal named Unk who holds the secret to genuinely good seasoning; a dystopian future where criminal trials are broadcast as reality TV and losing means getting boiled alive; and the 1970s, where a state fair showdown introduces the “burrito effect” as the butterfly effect’s culinary cousin. Frale maintains the comedy consistently across all three settings without letting any single location overstay its welcome. 🕰️
The villain—Clara’s handsy professor, who has a time-travel app and ambitions involving both Pete’s recipes and Clara herself—gives the increasingly chaotic adventure a plot spine. The sentient robot lawyer suffering from a crippling identity crisis is exactly the supporting character this story needed, and the merry prankster Neanderthal Unk proving unexpectedly useful in a crisis is a recurring delight. Time Burrito is the kind of humorous science fiction that earns its premise through sheer commitment and delivers a genuinely fun read. 😂
Why this makes you laugh: A food truck chef, a time vortex, a Neanderthal with excellent seasoning instincts, and a robot lawyer having an existential crisis—Time Burrito is committed absurdist sci-fi comedy at its most enjoyable.
The Missing Ones
Five years ago, three residents of Crestmore Estates vanished without a trace. No bodies. No answers. Just rumors circulating around the country club like slow poison. When human remains surface on the golf course, the community that has been carefully not talking about this for half a decade is suddenly forced to start. A.R. Torre, the New York Times bestselling author, builds the gated community psychological thriller with the layered suspense she has established as her signature. 🏡
The three women at the center are each living in the shadow of a disappeared person. Andrea Kendal knows what people think about her brilliant surgeon husband and his first wife’s bloody disappearance. Sara Batcher has been defending herself against murder accusations for years. Katie Morrow can’t escape the suspicious history attached to her husband’s ex-wife. Torre gives each woman a specific, credible situation—these aren’t generic suspects but people whose lives have been genuinely shaped by proximity to violence they may or may not have committed. 🔍
The neighborhood itself functions as a character—the manicured lawns and guarded gates that promise safety while incubating exactly the kind of secrets that safety requires. As the investigation circles closer, the three women are drawn together by the particular solidarity of people who know that appearances are everything and that someone is about to shatter all of theirs. Torre handles the multiple-POV structure with practiced confidence, and the psychological pressure building toward the revelation is genuinely sustained. 😰
Why this grips you: A gated community, five-year-old disappearances, remains on the golf course, and three women whose carefully constructed lives are about to come apart—The Missing Ones is A.R. Torre at full psychological intensity.
Decades after the Cybercrash destroyed the internet and nearly destroyed the nation, the OverNet has replaced it—a new cybersecurity architecture built by tech genius Dr. Andrew Norman that promised safety and delivered control. Jason Cromartie is a gamer who had no particular reason to question the system until his twin sister became a casualty of its algorithmic choices. Now he’ll do anything to bring Norman down, including becoming a phreaker working for a dangerous hacker ring. Anthony Tardiff builds the cyberpunk thriller premise with real technological specificity. 💻
The dual protagonist structure gives the story two angles of attack on the same problem. Chloe Dunne-Carr is an ambitious politician who has reaped the benefits of OverNet while publicly opposing Norman—a morally complicated position that becomes considerably more complicated as the algorithm’s reach expands and she begins raising a daughter in a world losing touch with its own humanity. The tension between Chloe’s opposition in principle and her complicity in practice gives her arc genuine moral weight. 🏛️
The boundary between human and machine that the novel keeps examining is not handled as a simple dystopian warning but as a genuine philosophical question about what kinds of algorithmic control are acceptable and at what point efficiency becomes something indistinguishable from tyranny. Tardiff’s action-thriller instincts keep the intellectual content grounded in propulsive narrative rather than speculative lecture. The Final System is a new release that arrives at exactly the right cultural moment for its concerns to feel urgent rather than hypothetical. 🤖
Why this is timely: A vigilante hacker, a politician with complicated loyalties, and an AI system that has crossed the line between helpful and terrifying—The Final System is sci-fi thriller for the algorithmic age.
Madison Callahan spins narratives for a living—crisis management is her specialty, and she is very good at it. What she cannot manage, apparently, is the trauma doctor in the apartment directly above hers who has developed a habit of running on his treadmill at hours that violate every reasonable noise ordinance. Beckett Lawson, for his part, has a professional approach to everything: fix what’s broken, contain the variables, keep the emotions locked down. Laura Ashley Gallagher sets up the enemies-to-lovers dynamic with real comic energy. 🏥
The building-as-forced-proximity container is a reliable romantic comedy setup, and Gallagher runs it with enough specific character detail that Madison and Beckett feel like particular people rather than genre positions. His emotional lockdown has a specific history. Her need to outrun her family history gives her urgency beyond the professional. The midnight stairwell confrontations that develop between them have the kind of crackling antagonism that the genre does best when both characters are genuinely matched in stubbornness and wit. 💊
The political firestorm Madison is navigating professionally adds a thriller dimension to the romantic comedy structure—her work life is genuinely high-stakes rather than decorative background, and the pressure it puts on her availability and emotional bandwidth makes the developing relationship more realistically complicated. Gallagher balances the professional and personal threads with the confidence of a new release writer who knows exactly what she wants the book to be. The medical romance setting gives Beckett’s controlled exterior a professional logic that makes its eventual cracking feel more earned. 🔥
Why this wins you over: A crisis manager, a treadmill-thudding trauma doctor upstairs, midnight stairwell showdowns, and a slow burn that neither of them saw coming—This Wasn’t The Plan is a charming new release medical romance.





