Valentine’s Day is approaching and Rick and Mandy, New York’s premiere paranormal detective pair, might have been hoping for chocolate kisses and roses. Instead FBI Chief Hernandez pulls them into a new case: his daughter’s favorite author has been murdered, and he needs the city’s best paranormal investigators on it. Up-and-coming graphic novelist Eve Wellington has been killed—and the eleventh installment of the Paranormal in Manhattan series opens with the novel detail of the victim herself being surprised to find she is newly dead. 🐇
The suspect list has the specific quality that makes cozy mysteries so reliable: a contained world of people with comprehensible motives. Rival artists who resented Eve’s rising profile. Exhausted editors who dealt with the self-styled cartoon diva’s demands on a daily basis. Overworked assistants who knew everything about her and were paid inadequately for the privilege. The investigation that leads through this world eventually finds its direction in an unexpected place—a trail of a white rabbit that winds through the Alice in Wonderland imagery the case has been accumulating. 🔍
Lotta Smith writes the Paranormal in Manhattan series with the wit and affection for New York City that sustains a long-running cozy mystery franchise—a city large enough to contain every kind of person and strange enough to make the paranormal feel like one more layer of what is already unusual about living there. The eleventh installment delivers a self-contained mystery with the warm familiarity of returning to characters and a city the series has been building across ten prior books. 🗽
What makes this charming: Lotta Smith delivers the eleventh Paranormal in Manhattan mystery with her signature wit—a murdered graphic novelist who is herself surprised to be dead, a Valentine’s Day investigation, rival artists and overworked assistants, and a white rabbit leading New York’s paranormal detectives to the killer. 🌟
Reason Alexander has built a life most people would envy—money, power, and a family he cherishes. He has operated from a position of control for long enough that losing it feels unthinkable. Then an accident leaves him temporarily paralyzed, and the life he constructed around his own capability comes apart in ways that cannot be managed through the tools that built it. The physical recovery is one problem. The depression that follows is another. 💛
His referral to physical therapist Serenity Jones is the beginning of something neither of them anticipated. Serenity’s work is to help him relearn the physical—to rebuild strength and capability through the slow, unglamorous process that recovery actually requires. What develops between them as they work through those obstacles is a bond that forms the way the best connections do: through shared difficulty, through the specific intimacy of one person helping another through something genuinely hard. Reason discovers, in the course of learning what he is still capable of, that he is capable of more than he had allowed himself to need. 🌟
Kyiris Ashley builds the Serenity and Reason series on the specific emotional territory that urban romance handles at its best—a powerful man whose strength is genuine but whose vulnerability, when it finally arrives, opens him to a connection his prior life had no room for. The physical therapy setting grounds the romance in a relationship of real work and real progress, giving the emotional arc something concrete to develop alongside. 💪
What makes this compelling: Kyiris Ashley launches the Serenity and Reason series with an urban romance of genuine emotional depth—a Detroit power player humbled by an accident and depression, a physical therapist whose work becomes something more, and a bond formed in the slow difficult space of recovery. 🌟
The Duke of Eddleston hired Mr. Gamon and his two assistants to prepare his daughter Jemima for her first season in Town—to transform her, per Mr. Gamon’s motto, into a lady who could look modest and, if possible, abashed. Mr. Gamon left the duke’s house with his head rather low. Jemima Fornay is not a woman who takes naturally to being managed, which is a quality that will serve her significantly better in life than Mr. Gamon’s program would have. 😄
Jasper Pennington, Duke of Barstow, has approached the question of marriage with the same joyless efficiency he brings to all his ducal responsibilities. He has determined it is time to wed and produce an heir. He has composed a list of required attributes for his future duchess: she will be, according to the list, the most refined lady in London. He has not yet encountered Jemima Fornay, who is many things and refined in the specific manner he is imagining is not among them. The collision between his list and the actual person is the engine of the novel. 💛
Kate Archer writes Regency comedy of manners with the wit and period sensibility that distinguishes the League of Meddling Butlers series—a world where the below-stairs staff have strong opinions about their employers’ romantic prospects and are not above engineering circumstances to encourage the right outcomes. The meddling butler framework gives the series its charm: interference conducted with perfect deniability, in the service of matches that the principals would never arrive at through their own logic alone. 🌹
What makes this delightful: Kate Archer launches the League of Meddling Butlers with a Regency comedy of irresistible charm—a duke with a very precise list of requirements for his future duchess, a lady who defeated three professional refinement specialists, and six meddling butlers with strong opinions about how this should go. 🌟
Across the Vanishing Sky (Starlight Grove Book 1)
Braedyn Winslow left Starlight Grove—the town that took everything from her—and stayed away until staying away was no longer an option. Her best friend, the one who sacrificed so much for her, vanished without a trace. She has a young son to raise and a past that will not stay where she put it. She is back, and she is determined to find the truth about what happened, even knowing that some of the people in Starlight Grove would prefer the truth to stay buried. 🌲
Dex Archer is the stuff of local legend: silent, reclusive, a mountain man surrounded by whispers about his violent father and his brothers. Braedyn sees through the scowl and the reputation to what is actually there—fiercely loyal, unexpectedly kind, and dangerous enough to be useful when someone starts warning her off her search. The closer she gets to the truth about her missing friend, the harder it becomes to maintain any distance from the man next door who has already decided he is not going to let anyone hurt her. 💛
Catherine Cowles—the New York Times bestselling author of the Tattered Stars series and multiple other small-town romance franchises—launches Starlight Grove with the atmospheric suspense and emotional warmth that has built her readership across a long career. The missing friend mystery gives the novel its thriller undercurrent while the romance develops with the patience and character depth that Cowles handles particularly well—a heroine whose search requires real courage and a hero whose walls are coming down in real time, in a setting rendered with the lush specificity that makes small-town fiction feel like a place worth visiting. 🏔️
What makes this essential: Catherine Cowles launches Starlight Grove with a small-town romantic suspense of genuine depth—a woman returning to the town that broke her to find a vanished best friend, a brooding reclusive neighbor who will wade back into his own darkness to protect her, and a truth someone is willing to kill to keep buried. 🌟
Sarah Bennett is a successful architect who has built a beautiful home and a solid marriage—a life she designed with the same care and precision she brings to her professional work. She comes home early from a gala and finds her husband Harrison on the couch with her sister Emily. The betrayal is total. Sarah’s response is equally decisive: she files for divorce, reclaims the house, and forces Harrison out with the efficiency of someone who knows exactly how to dismantle a structure. 💔
The novel then does something the genre does not always attempt: it follows Harrison into the wreckage. What he thought was a thrilling, no-strings-attached escape becomes a life sentence when Emily announces she is pregnant. Trapped in a miserable existence with the woman who helped him burn his life down, watching his career and mental health deteriorate, Harrison has to observe from the shadows as Sarah rises from the ashes with a new man who recognizes exactly what she is worth. The symmetry is deliberate and satisfying—one person’s catastrophic choice rendered in full, both its cost to the innocent party and its consequences for the guilty one. 😤
Sienna Cullen builds the Love Hurts series on the specific emotional satisfaction of the betrayal romance done with narrative justice—the wronged party’s recovery rendered with genuine care, the betrayer’s consequences proportional and specific, and a new love interest who functions as evidence that the problem was never the person who was cheated on. The architectural metaphor running through the novel—foundations, structures, things built to last versus rigged to explode—gives the premise its particular coherence. 💛
What makes this compelling: Sienna Cullen launches Love Hurts with a betrayal romance of sharp emotional clarity—a wife who scorched the earth and rebuilt, a husband who discovered his escape was a trap, and a narrative that follows both long enough to deliver the consequences each deserves. 🌟
On April 1, 1976, two scrappy twenty-somethings both named Steve founded a startup with the goal of bringing the power of computers to everyone. Fifty years later, Apple is the most valuable company in the world, and the journey between those two points—the near-death experiences, the return of Jobs, the product launches that changed how people live—is one of the great business stories of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. David Pogue, CBS Sunday Morning correspondent and one of technology journalism’s most respected voices, tells the complete story for Apple’s anniversary. 📱
The scope is genuinely comprehensive. The book covers the full arc from the Apple I through the Mac, the iMac, the iPod, iTunes, the iPhone, the iPad, AirPods, and Apple Watch—the products that married technology to beauty, simplicity, and design in ways that their competitors spent decades trying to replicate. It also covers the failures: Lisa, Apple III, MobileMe, and the instructive disasters that shaped the culture. The 150 interviews Pogue conducted include Steve Wozniak, John Sculley, and Jony Ive, as well as current designers, engineers, and executives speaking on the record for the first time. 🍎
The book corrects long-held myths and goes backstage for both the triumphs and the failures with the access that a five-decade anniversary biography commands. The commercial numbers—450 million iPods, 700 million iPads, 2.2 billion iPhones—are staggering in aggregate, and Pogue puts them in the context of the corporate culture and product philosophy that made them possible while assessing the forces that challenge Apple’s dominance as it enters its second half century. 💡
What makes this essential: David Pogue delivers the definitive Apple biography for the company’s 50th anniversary—150 new interviews, myth-busting research, backstage access to both the titanic successes and the instructive failures, and the complete story of how two Steves in a garage became the most valuable company in history. 🌟





