Thorburn MacDougall, commander of the Lord of Argyll’s warriors, defeats the canniest Norwegian opponent he has ever faced and rips off the helm to savor the moment—only to discover that the canny Norwegian is not a man at all but a blue-eyed woman with fire in her eyes and fury in her soul. He stops the killing blow. What he does next will define the rest of the novel. 🏴
Adellis Bjørnsdóttir weighed her options and decided that capture by a Scottish warrior was better than the alternatives she was fleeing. She allowed the fearsome Highland bear to take her, calculating that she could endure whatever came next long enough to secure safe passage to Scotland. What she did not calculate for was a man who is protective and considerate alongside the stubborn and formidable—a man whose curious touch and smoldering presence make the arrangement considerably more complicated than strategic endurance. 💛
Maeve Greyson writes Scottish historical romance with the fire-and-ice dynamic that the Once Upon a Scot series promises in its title—two equally matched, equally determined people whose opposition is the source of both the conflict and the chemistry. Adellis is not a woman who is rescued; she made her own choice to be captured, for her own strategic reasons, and the novel honors that agency even as the romance develops from it. Thorburn’s discovery that the woman he captured is not what he expected generates the sustained tension that carries the series forward from this first installment. 🔥
What makes this captivating: Maeve Greyson launches Once Upon a Scot with a Scottish historical romance of genuine heat—a Highland warrior who rips off his opponent’s helm and discovers a blue-eyed Norwegian woman, a captive who chose capture for her own strategic reasons, and an arrangement neither of them planned to feel anything about. 🌟
Dan’s immediate goals are modest: find his way home, get a beer, eat something, and sleep off a hangover of considerable proportions. None of these goals are achievable in the Backrooms—an endless, ever-changing extra-dimensional space cobbled together from twisted carnivals, condemned insane asylums, abandoned shopping malls, and janky laundromats, overrun by horrific nightmare creatures called the Dwellers. Dan has accidentally Noclipped in. Nobody ever gets out. 🏚️
Forget getting out—if Dan wants to survive the week, he needs to understand and harness the strange game-like magic of the Backrooms, build some sketchy alliances with whatever passes for friendlies in this environment, and carve out a small defensible safe haven before the Flayed Monarch of the 999th floor—who has already marked Dan for death—sends the Skinless Court to collect. The urgency is immediate and the resources are limited, and Dan’s skill set before this happened was not specifically designed for extra-dimensional survival. ⚡
James Hunter writes LitRPG with the propulsive pacing and darkly comic voice that makes the Backrooms setting—a genuine internet horror phenomenon—work as the basis for a full-length series. The Backrooms aesthetic is genuinely unsettling in ways that most fantasy dungeon environments are not: familiar but wrong, mundane locations rendered nightmarish by their combination and their context. Dan’s everyman quality gives the novel its entry point, and the game-like magic system gives it its mechanics. The series title promises bargains, and the first installment delivers them in the grimly inventive way that the premise demands. 🌑
What makes this propulsive: James Hunter launches Discount Dan’s Backroom Bargains with a LitRPG of genuine dread and dark comedy—a regular guy accidentally trapped in an endless extra-dimensional nightmare of abandoned malls and carnivorous Dwellers, hunted by a Flayed Monarch, and trying to survive long enough to figure out the rules. 🌟
Eagle River is the kind of small town where quaint shops and historic homes line the streets, gossip flows freely, and the back roads hold more secrets than the official version of community life would suggest. Kate Duncan delivers the mail, which means she knows the routes, the houses, and the rhythms of a town that presents one face to the world and keeps another one private. One summer afternoon, a veterinarian flags down her mail car from a pasture. She helps deliver a calf—rusty farm-girl skills coming back to her—and discovers that the elderly man who lives alone at the property has vanished without a trace. 🌾
The investigation that follows is unofficial, conducted alongside her regular mail route, built from the intriguing leads she uncovers as she travels Eagle River’s back roads. The missing man was someone most residents barely knew, which means the community knowledge that usually flows freely in a small town is not particularly helpful here. When the official investigation generates nothing but dead ends, Kate’s position—traversing every road in the county, observing what others miss—gives her an investigative advantage that nobody else has. 🔍
Melanie Lageschulte writes the Mailbox Mysteries series with the cozy fiction warmth and rural Midwest atmosphere that has made her Freesia Lane series a beloved presence in the genre. The mail carrier premise is a genuinely clever one—a protagonist whose job requires her to traverse the entire community gives the series both its plot engine and its particular texture. Eagle River feels genuinely inhabited, the gossip flows naturally, and the big secrets sheltered by the cozy town are handled with the light touch that the family life fiction category rewards. 🏡
What makes this charming: Melanie Lageschulte launches the Mailbox Mysteries series with a cozy small-town mystery of genuine warmth—an Eagle River mail carrier whose daily routes give her access to secrets the official investigation cannot find, and a vanished elderly man that nobody in town knew well enough to explain. 🌟
The Night We Met
After a concert, Larissa had to choose who to ride home with. She chose Chris’s best friend—and that choice became her boyfriend, her relationship, her present. Chris became something else: the man she co-parents a slightly unhinged rescue Yorkie with, the person she shares favorite books with, the friend who makes everything feel easy in ways that her actual relationship does not. She did not know, that night, that she had chosen wrong. 💛
Chris knows. He has known for months. Watching from the sidelines while Larissa is with his best friend is slowly killing him, but making a move would destroy someone he loves. The situation is constructed with the precision of a genuine romantic dilemma: he cannot act without betraying a friend, and he cannot not act without betraying whatever it is he and Larissa have become across shared books and a misbehaving Yorkie. Something that feels this right being absolutely impossible is the specific romantic comedy torture that Abby Jimenez specializes in. 😄
Jimenez—the New York Times bestselling author of Part of Your World and The Happy Ever After Playlist—writes contemporary romantic comedy with the emotional intelligence and genuine humor that has made her one of the genre’s most beloved current voices. The premise here is structured around a single split-second decision that haunts the entire novel without becoming melodramatic, and the Chris-Larissa dynamic builds with the patience and warmth that distinguishes Jimenez’s best work. The unhinged rescue Yorkie is a supporting character who justifies its own existence. 🐾
What makes this irresistible: Abby Jimenez delivers a new romantic comedy built on the cruelest of premises—the man Larissa chose wrong, the man she chose right without knowing it, a rescue Yorkie that belongs to both of them, and a friendship that is slowly becoming the thing neither of them can afford to name. 🌟
Jenny Lawson is a celebrated author who battles self-doubt and paralysis. She is an award-winning humorist who struggles with treatment-resistant depression. She keeps creating, keeps going, keeps showing up—and the question people ask her most often is how. This book is her answer: over a hundred tools and tricks she actually uses to keep functioning when her brain is not cooperating, written with the honesty and humor that have made her one of the most beloved voices in mental health writing. 💛
The chapter titles give a sense of the approach: “Wash Your Brain More Than You Wash Your Bra” addresses sleep with the directness of someone who has learned its importance the hard way. “Working on Easy Mode Is Still Working” makes the case for accommodations and adjustments without apology. “Celebrate Good Times, Come On!” argues for making the deliberate celebration of good things a genuine habit rather than something that happens when circumstances permit. The tools are practical, the humor is real, and the underlying message is consistent: you are not alone, and doing the best you can with a brain that is making things harder than they should be still counts. 🌟
Lawson—author of Let’s Pretend This Never Happened and Furiously Happy—writes about depression, anxiety, and ADHD with the specific combination of comedic precision and genuine vulnerability that has built her a devoted readership among people who have been waiting for someone to describe their experience accurately and make them laugh about it at the same time. This new book extends that project into practical territory: not just recognition but tools. 💡
What makes this essential: Jenny Lawson delivers over a hundred practical tools for staying alive, creative, and functional despite depression, anxiety, and ADHD—written with the same honesty and humor that made her previous books essential reading for anyone whose brain occasionally refuses to cooperate. 🌟
In 1990, Major Mark Hertling deployed to Iraq as an operations officer with an armored cavalry squadron. His unit was told to expect fifty percent casualties. That probability—and the real possibility that he might never see his family again—led him to start keeping a journal in an army-issued green notebook, writing to his young sons about the things he wanted them to know about him if he did not come home: character, leadership, camaraderie, love, fear, the things he had learned about being a man and a soldier. 📖
The journal captured Operation Desert Storm in unfiltered handwritten entries—the waiting and the missions, the chaos and the courage, the brotherhood and the grief, the specific texture of combat in ways that official after-action reports do not and cannot record. He survived, returned home, watched his sons grow up. Decades later, after both sons had become combat veterans themselves, one of them typed out the original pages as a gift to his father. In revisiting those entries, Hertling—who had gone on to senior military leadership, then retirement as a cable news analyst, health care executive, and professor—added reflections drawn from everything he had learned across the decades since the war. 💛
The result is a rare document: a wartime journal written in real time for sons who might never read it, reunited with a father who survived to see them become soldiers themselves, layered with the perspective of a lifetime of leadership. Hertling’s post-military career as a public commentator on military affairs gives the reflective sections a breadth that the original battlefield entries alone could not provide. 🎖️
What makes this essential: Mark Hertling delivers a rare wartime document—a journal written to his young sons before Desert Storm in case he didn’t return, typed out decades later by a son who became a combat veteran himself, layered with the author’s reflections on a lifetime of leadership, duty, and service. 🌟





