She is not just a witch. She is the missing daughter of a murdered royal line, the last heir of the Primordials, and the first soul witch to survive into adulthood—a kind of magic made to command life, death, and everything in between. A power that was never supposed to exist. When her binding spell breaks, she is sent to the Whisperfelt Institute, supposedly for protection. It is not a school. It is a cage disguised as education—built to watch her, test her, and contain her if necessary. The only reason she is still alive: five men step between her and the people who want her erased. Letty Frame opens the Primordial Queen series with the reverse harem fantasy romance that builds its stakes from revolution-level foundations. ✨
The five men who protect her give the series its specific ensemble architecture: Eirik, all crown and command; Ryes, inside her mind before she can panic; Mael, ruthless enough to burn the world to keep her breathing; Ciar, shadows wrapped around a promise; and Zohar, who feels like fate itself. Frame develops the Whisperfelt academy world with the hidden-legacy and political intrigue framework that distinguishes the Primordial Queen series within the crowded reverse harem fantasy space. 💙
Frame is an English paranormal and omegaverse reverse harem romance author whose work has built a devoted following for the combination of slow-burn high-heat romance, emotionally authentic heroines, and morally grey protectors with genuine character depth. The series has been described as “a hidden princess, a deadly academy, morally grey protectors, fated bonds, and revolution-level stakes.” ⭐
Why this captivates: The last heir of a murdered royal line, the first soul witch to survive into adulthood, caged inside a deadly academy—and five men who will burn the world to keep her alive—the Primordial Queen series opener, free.
College student Madeline Swanson walks into the wrong job interview—and immediately catches the attention of Evan Kohl, a powerful billionaire who is looking for something very different from an assistant. His offer is explicit: he will cover her tuition, living expenses, and a generous shopping budget. In return, she signs a contract making herself available on his terms—on his arm or in his bed. She says no. He pursues her relentlessly anyway. Evelyn Austin opens the Filthy Billionaires series with the dark billionaire romance that delivers its power-dynamic premise with the explicit intensity its readership comes for. 🖤
The contract structure gives the novel its specific framework—an arrangement negotiated between two people with vastly unequal leverage, and the question of whether genuine connection can emerge from deliberate transaction. Austin develops Evan’s obsessive pursuit and Madeline’s specific circumstances with the dark romance energy that has built the series’ dedicated following: readers who want their billionaire fiction with genuine heat, real control dynamics, and the darkly possessive hero fully committed to having what he wants. 💙
Austin writes with the combination of intense power dynamics, explicit heat, and the specific psychological charge of dark romance that has built her readership. The Filthy Billionaires series is a four-book collection following different couples within the same world, with each book delivering the dark billionaire romance premise at full intensity. Readers who enjoy this subgenre consistently rate the series highly for its heat and its commitment to the premise. ⭐
Why this hooks you: The wrong job interview, the explicit contract offer, and a billionaire who won’t take no for an answer—Evelyn Austin’s dark billionaire romance series opener, free.
Tracy McCoy is a country music star whose career is fading—five years of writer’s block, a star that was once massive now dimming, and a desperation so real she agrees to do the one thing she has always refused: collaborate with someone else on her songs. Payton Edwards is twenty-five, living between San Diego and a Colorado mountain cabin, writing songs for the biggest names in country music and dreaming about the woman who has been her idol for years. When their shared manager puts them together for a week of songwriting, what ignites between them is hotter than anything either expected. Laura Conway opens with the sapphic romance that earns its specific warmth from the musical world it inhabits. 💙
The week-in-the-cabin forced-proximity structure gives the novel its specific intimate atmosphere—two women, a guitar, a Colorado mountain setting, and the slow acknowledgment that what’s happening between them is more than professional. Tracy’s coming-out arc gives the novel its deeper emotional stakes: she has spent her entire career hiding her true self, and falling for Payton means confronting the identity she locked away decades ago. Conway develops both the musical passion and the romantic tension with the honesty that distinguishes her work. 💕
Conway is a beloved sapphic romance author whose work has built a devoted following for the combination of genuinely steamy age-gap romance, emotionally authentic coming-out narratives, and the specific pleasures of music-world settings rendered with genuine love for the subject. Readers consistently describe her books as impossible to put down—sweet, sexy, honest, and deeply satisfying. ⭐
Why this moves you: A fading country star who hasn’t written a song in five years, the young songwriter who has always loved her from afar, one week in a Colorado cabin, and feelings neither of them planned on—Laura Conway’s sapphic romance, free.
Murder by Design
Edison Bixby is wealthy, handsome, and—due to a traumatic brain injury from being shot in the face—constitutionally incapable of keeping his thoughts to himself. He is also a brilliant insurance investigator who solves baffling crimes by understanding how the design of the built world makes them possible. Enter Wally Nash: a struggling character actor hired not to investigate crimes but to follow Bixby around and apologize to everyone he offends. Their first case together looks like a simple accident—Caroline Crowley fell down a mall staircase in front of dozens of witnesses, and video confirms the misstep. Bixby is certain she was murdered by design, the mall itself engineered to make her death intentional. Lee Goldberg opens the Edison Bixby series with the mystery thriller that may be the most genuinely original detective premise of 2026. 🔍
The conceptual engine that distinguishes the series—that crimes can be committed through design, through the deliberate shaping of environments to produce specific fatal outcomes invisible to anyone not trained to see them—gives every investigation its specific intellectual pleasure. Bixby doesn’t just solve crimes; he sees the built world as a system of intentions, most benign, some murderous, all legible to someone with his specific combination of architectural intelligence and zero social filter. Goldberg develops this premise with the careful construction of a writer who has spent decades understanding what makes mystery fiction satisfying. 💙
Goldberg is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Eve Ronin LAPD series and dozens of other novels, and has written and produced television including Diagnosis Murder and Monk. The Associated Press called *Murder by Design* “the most ingenious mystery I’ve read in years.” Best Thriller Books declared it “ranked at the top of any serious list extolling the best books of 2026.” As a new release from one of mystery fiction’s most commercially successful voices, this is an immediate essential. ⭐
Why this captivates: A brain-injured detective who sees murder in architecture, a struggling actor hired to apologize for him, and a mall death that looks like an accident to everyone except Edison Bixby—Lee Goldberg’s ingenious new series opener.
Phoebe Berman is a hopeless romantic, a devoted reader of romance novels, a pre-K teacher in Los Angeles—and a twenty-nine-year-old virgin. With one month before her thirtieth birthday, she drafts the ultimate “Guide to Losing My Virginity” checklist and sets out to finally do something about it. The problem: an extremely unfortunate first kiss attempt during her teenage years left her with crippling intimacy anxiety, which means going on a date makes her want to throw up. Brooke Averick opens her debut novel with the romantic comedy premise that earns its specific warmth from the gap between Phoebe’s vast theoretical knowledge of romance and her complete inability to practice any of it. 💕
The checklist launches Phoebe from a basically nonexistent dating life into juggling three romantic prospects simultaneously: the gorgeous new fourth-grade teacher at her school, a former high school classmate who resurfaces through Words with Friends, and her roommate—who might just be the friends-to-lovers situation of her dreams. Averick develops the anxiety dimension with the honesty that distinguishes this from more superficial romantic comedy—Phoebe’s intimacy fears are real and rendered with genuine empathy, and the comedy that surrounds them never minimizes what they actually cost her. 💙
Averick is a comedian and podcaster with over 1.5 million social media followers, and *Phoebe Berman’s Gonna Lose It* is the debut that her audience has been anticipating since she announced it. #1 New York Times bestselling author Lyla Sage called it “witty, relatable, and unflinchingly honest—I laughed, I cried, I swooned, and I looked into the metaphorical camera wondering if this book was actually about me.” Marie Claire named it one of the most anticipated books of spring 2026. As a new release from one of comedy’s most distinctive voices, this is an immediate recommendation. ⭐
Why this charms: A romance novel devotee who has never managed any of the things romance novels are about, a thirtieth birthday approaching, a checklist, and three prospects at once—Brooke Averick’s effervescent debut.
Josie Reid abandoned her Texas hometown six years ago when Weston Jessup chose his family’s ranch over her. She’s a country music sensation now—and she’s back where it all started to officiate her brother’s wedding, which means facing Weston again in the place she left behind. Jessica Peterson brings her signature cowboys-and-heat energy to the Summer Lovin’ short romance collection with a second-chance story built on the specific ache of two people who made the wrong choice years ago and now have very little time to figure out whether they can make a different one. 💕
The wedding setting gives the short its built-in pressure—a fixed timeline, a public stage, and the specific emotional intensity of watching two families come together while the one relationship that didn’t work out is right there in the room. Peterson develops the Josie and Weston dynamic with the efficient characterization that short romance demands when it needs to establish history and attraction simultaneously, and the Texas ranch atmosphere gives the story its specific sensory warmth. 💙
Peterson is a New York Times bestselling author whose Lucky River Ranch series has built a massive devoted following for the combination of deeply felt cowboy romance, heat balanced with genuine emotional stakes, and the specific pleasures of small-town Texas settings rendered with authentic detail. *Save a Horse, Keep the Cowboy* is part of the Summer Lovin’ collection alongside stories from Tessa Bailey, Rebecca Jenshak, and others—sweet and sultry short reads designed to be finished in a single sitting, each delivering the full emotional arc of romance in compact form. As a new release from one of the genre’s most beloved voices, this is an immediate recommendation. ⭐
Why this charms: A country music star back in her Texas hometown to officiate her brother’s wedding, the cowboy who chose his ranch over her six years ago, and the question of whether some choices can be unmade—Jessica Peterson’s new second-chance short.





