Jane Stewart is reliving the worst day of her life on a loop. She’s late to the same critical meeting. She’s fired from the same soul-crushing job. She’s dumped by the same lying, selfish dirtbag. Over and over and over again, no matter what she tries to change. Mary Frame takes the Groundhog Day premise and adds a specific and very funny wrinkle: being stuck in a time loop has not, it turns out, cured Jane’s crippling social anxiety. The personal growth portion of this experience is not going well. ⏰
The one genuinely bright spot is her long-time crush, who wants to be more than friends—if Jane can get them successfully through a first date, which the time loop keeps conspiring to prevent. Frame builds the romantic comedy with real comic timing, finding fresh variations on the same disastrous day without letting the repetition become tedious. The social anxiety thread gives Jane an internal obstacle that’s separate from the external time-loop chaos, which keeps the character arc from being entirely dependent on the gimmick. 💕
The stakes escalate satisfyingly when saving her job and her budding relationship turns out to also involve saving the space-time continuum—which is a lot to ask of someone with social anxiety. Frame handles the tonal balance between absurd comedy and genuine romantic warmth with a confident hand, and Jane is a protagonist whose specific, relatable anxieties make her immediately lovable. The Time After Time series has a devoted readership, and this first volume is a thoroughly enjoyable entry point. 😅
Why this loops you in: A terrible day on infinite repeat, a crush worth breaking the space-time continuum for, and a heroine whose anxiety makes the time loop considerably worse—Time of My Life is a romantic comedy that earns its happy ending.
He’s the academy golden boy and swim team hotshot—and the bane of her existence. She’s from the other side of the beach, which in Ryder Bay means a different world entirely. The unspoken rule is that people from opposite sides don’t mix. Then she needs money badly enough to accept his offer to pay her for surfing lessons, and the rule starts developing cracks. Jordan Ford sets the class-divide romance in a coastal California atmosphere that feels specific and sun-soaked throughout. 🏄
The surfing lesson dynamic is a clever inversion of the usual power arrangement—she’s the expert, he’s the student, and that shift gives her a standing in the relationship that the social hierarchy would otherwise deny her. Ford builds the mutual antagonism with real warmth underneath it, making it clear from early on that the bane-of-my-existence feeling is the kind that comes from paying too much attention rather than too little. The beach setting gives the romantic tension a physical, sun-and-salt texture that suits the story perfectly. 🌊
The Ryder Bay series has developed a substantial following in the young adult and new adult space, and this first volume establishes why—Ford writes coming-of-age friendships and romance with genuine emotional intelligence, and the social pressures of the beach community give the story stakes that feel real rather than manufactured. The friendship fiction category suits the book well: relationships of all kinds are examined here, not just the central romance. ☀️
Why this draws you in: Two sides of the beach that aren’t supposed to mix, a surfing lesson that changes everything, and a romance that earns its way past every obstacle the social rules put in its path.
Nathan Lee has three talents: overthinking social encounters, avoiding responsibility, and farming in video games. When the apocalypse arrives and humanity gets ripped from Earth and dropped into a nine-realm multidimensional dungeon, Nathan accidentally allocates his rare skill points into fishing. While legends are out there swinging gigantic swords and casting fireball barrages, Nathan is quietly maxing out his ability to sit in a boat. This is not ideal. Liam Lawless commits to the LitRPG premise with genuine comedic commitment and genuine craft in equal measure. 🎣
The system bug that accidentally deletes a monster from reality on Nathan’s first day, the snail he feeds radishes that grants him a rare skill, the fishing rod he ends up using to take down ogres—the escalation is gloriously absurd and carefully constructed. Lawless understands that the joke only works if the underlying game mechanics are internally consistent, and he builds the dungeon world with enough rigor that the comedy lands rather than feeling arbitrary. The weak-class-is-secretly-overpowered trope is a LitRPG staple, and this is one of the fresher executions of it. 🐌
Nathan’s personality—genuinely reluctant, self-aware about his own uselessness, deeply uncomfortable with being the accidental hero—is what separates The Apocalypse is a Side Quest from the crowded LitRPG field. He doesn’t want to save the world. He would like to go back to his video game farm. The universe has other plans, and watching those plans collide with Nathan’s profound resistance is consistently entertaining. 🎮
Why this hooks you: A reluctant hero with a fishing rod, a dungeon that has no idea what it’s dealing with, and a LitRPG that earns its laughs while building a genuinely inventive world—The Apocalypse is a Side Quest is a standout in the genre.
Where the Sea Lavender Grows
Elise arrives in North Norfolk to restore Marsh House—a faded beauty whose walls are adorned with the murals and paintings of its long-ago owner, Lilias Carter-Brown. Elise is grieving her son and watching her marriage fracture, and the restoration work is as much an attempt to rebuild herself as it is a professional project. The house draws her in immediately, and so does Sam, the carpenter working alongside her. Kitty Johnson builds the dual timeline with genuine atmospheric skill. 🌿
In 1939, with war threatening, Lilias and her sister turn Marsh House into a sanctuary for London evacuees—a young boy and his mother. The boy’s father, Harry, is about to report for military duty, and the bond that develops between him and Lilias is unexpected, intimate, and ultimately devastating when Harry vanishes without trace. Johnson renders the wartime atmosphere with the specific texture of the Norfolk coast—marsh and sea and the particular anxiety of a country waiting for something terrible to begin. 🌊
The mystery of Harry’s disappearance is the thread that connects the two timelines, drawing Elise deeper into Lilias’s past as the restoration progresses. Johnson is careful to let the historical story carry its own weight rather than simply serving as backstory for the contemporary romance—both Elise and Lilias are fully realized protagonists, and the parallel between their losses gives the novel a thematic resonance that lingers. Sam’s patient presence is a beautifully understated counterweight to both women’s grief. 🏡
Why this stays with you: Two women, two eras, one Norfolk house full of secrets, and a mystery that can only be solved by learning to look honestly at the past—Where the Sea Lavender Grows is a new release of rare quiet power.
She has a ten-year-old son, an animal rescue to run, a grandfather to care for, and zero bandwidth for complications—let alone cocky NFL quarterbacks. Then Archer Evans crashes into her life, literally, sentenced to community service at the shelter after a scandal. He’s towering, arrogant, and makes it immediately clear he’s interested. She has an eight-date rule specifically designed to prevent exactly this kind of situation. Karla Sorensen sets up the sports romance with real character specificity on both sides. 🏈
The community service setup is a reliable romance engine, but Sorensen runs it with enough emotional intelligence to distinguish How Not to Fall in Love from standard formula. Archer has genuine demons underneath the cocky exterior—mistakes he’s made, a reputation he’s earned, and a vulnerability that his public persona is designed to conceal. She’s wary not because she’s closed off but because she has genuine responsibilities that don’t leave room for the complications a man like Archer brings. 🐾
The slow erosion of both their defenses is handled with the warmth and emotional precision that has built Sorensen a devoted readership in the sports romance space. The single-mom dimension gives the heroine real stakes that extend beyond the romance—her son’s wellbeing is a factor in every choice she makes, and Sorensen doesn’t treat it as an obstacle to be cleared but as a genuine part of who she is. The eight-date rule, when it finally breaks, earns its moment. 💕
Why this wins you over: A scandal-prone NFL star doing community service, a single mom with rules designed to protect her heart, and a slow burn that earns every degree of its heat—How Not to Fall in Love is a new release worth your time.
Libby Ward became a mother at twenty-six convinced she was prepared—determined to give her kids a different childhood than her own and armed with every cultural “should” she could find. A couple of years in, with a toddler at her ankle and a baby in her arms and silent rage coursing through her veins, she began to unravel. What followed was the research project that became this book: why, with more parenting information available than ever before, is motherhood still so impossibly hard? 💛
Ward’s answer is honest and unflinching. She dives into the experiences that many mothers have and few say out loud—the lack of support, the invisible labor, the guilt that accrues for not being grateful enough, the cycles of generational patterns that play out before you even realize what’s happening. The fantasy of a hospital stay just to get a break is in here, and it lands with the particular relief of seeing something true written down plainly for the first time. Ward untangles social conditioning from learned trauma without making it clinical or distant. 📖
The book’s central argument is not that motherhood is a tragedy but that the myth of the ideal mother is—and that letting it go, asking for help, and prioritizing yourself are not failures but necessities. Ward writes with the warmth of someone who has done the hard internal work and wants company on the path, not an audience for her conclusions. For mothers who are struggling and don’t feel safe saying so, this is a book that says it for them. 🌱
Why this matters: Honest, generous, and saying the quiet parts out loud—Honest Motherhood is the book many mothers need and almost nobody gives them permission to read.





