Eleanor of Provence is one of English history’s more thoroughly forgotten queens—married to Henry III in her youth, navigating a court consumed by baronial wrath and intrigue, defying the monks to care personally for her ailing son who would become Edward I, and watching as Simon de Montfort’s rising popularity eclipsed her husband’s fading authority. Today her gravesite has been obliterated and its location forgotten, making her among the few English monarchs with no known tomb. J.P. Reedman gives Eleanor her voice back in a first-person novel written from the queen’s own perspective. 👑
The Second Barons’ Revolt is the novel’s political backdrop—the specific historical crisis in which Eleanor must distinguish friend from foe as the baronial opposition organized against Henry reaches its peak. Reedman writes medieval historical fiction with the specificity of a researcher who has spent real time with the primary sources, and Eleanor’s navigation of 13th-century court politics is rendered with both the tactical precision of a woman who survived a dangerous era and the personal warmth of a devoted mother and loyal friend. 🌿
The first-person structure gives the novel its defining quality—Eleanor observing, assessing, and responding to the world around her in her own voice gives the historical material an intimacy that third-person narration rarely achieves. The questions that drive the novel’s emotional arc—will Edward free his captive father at Evesham, and will Eleanor’s own legacy endure—are answered within the historical record, but Reedman makes both feel genuinely uncertain as the narrative builds toward them. For readers of medieval historical fiction who want their queens given their full due, this is a welcome recovery of a forgotten life. ⭐
Why this endures: A forgotten queen of 13th-century England finally given her own voice—Eleanor of Provence in the midst of baronial revolt, narrating her own remarkable life—My Fair Lady is medieval historical fiction with real intimacy.
Investigative journalist Will Harper arrives in Florida thinking he’s working a straightforward story about prison problems—putting human faces on the troubling excess of the judicial system, the kind of piece that matters but rarely surprises. What he finds instead is a trail of budget cuts, creative financial schemes, and dirty money that goes considerably deeper than one institution’s mismanagement. David Crosby opens the second Will Harper Florida novel with the classic investigative thriller setup: a reporter who pulls one thread and discovers the fabric is rotten much further than he expected. 🌴
The entire county sheriff’s department trying to stop him gives the investigation its specific danger—Will isn’t dealing with one corrupt individual but a system that has organized itself to protect its own interests, which means the threat can come from any direction and does. Crosby builds the pulse-pounding chase through both land and sea with the Florida setting doing real atmospheric work: the specific combination of subtropical geography, local political culture, and the particular lawlessness that can take root when institutions turn inward gives the thriller its distinctive texture. 🔍
Will Harper is established as a journalist whose instincts are sharper than his self-preservation—the kind of protagonist the investigative thriller requires, someone whose professional commitment to the story keeps pushing him past the point where a reasonable person would stop. Crosby writes the Florida crime thriller tradition with genuine affection for the state’s specific contradictions, and the Will Harper series has a devoted readership that follows him across his investigations into the systems that govern—and sometimes prey on—ordinary people. ⭐
Why this grips you: A journalist who came to Florida for a prison story and found the whole county trying to stop him from finishing it—Guilty Money is Florida investigative thriller with real momentum on land and sea.
She dropped out of college, moved back in with her parents, and is working whatever jobs she can find while her ex-boyfriend wins trophies all over ESPN with apparent zero heartbreak. Then she meets Leo, and he makes her forget about the mess her life has become, and she doesn’t ask enough questions—because the cute guy she went home with is Leo Lohan, star forward for the Wildcat hockey team. Rebecca Jenshak opens the Wildcat Hockey series with the forbidden sports romance complication deployed at maximum impact: her dad is the coach. 🏒
The specific double bind this creates—her parents are already disappointed in her, Leo has a lot on the line with the team, and nobody can find out—gives the romance its stakes beyond the personal. Jenshak uses the coach’s-daughter dynamic with the real social texture of a world where everyone on a team knows everyone else’s business and secrets have a short shelf life. The electric tension of two people who know they shouldn’t and can’t stay away anyway is rendered with the specific energy that sports romance does best. 💕
Jenshak is one of the most consistently popular authors in college sports romance, with a readership that has followed her across multiple series and multiple sports. The Wildcat Hockey series benefits from the specific atmosphere of college hockey—the team dynamics, the competitive pressure, the social world of campus athletics—and Jenshak builds both the romantic tension and the ensemble around it with her characteristic warmth and wit. The forbidden dimension is handled as a genuine structural challenge rather than simply a label, which gives the eventual resolution its earned weight. ⭐
Why this pulls you in: She didn’t know he was a hockey star—and definitely didn’t know her dad was his coach—now nobody can find out, and that’s not going to hold—Wildcat is forbidden sports romance with real heat.
Cursed
Jesse McDermitt glimpsed a shipwreck for one second during a harrowing ascent from the darkest depths of the Florida Straits—an ascent that cost his friend an eye and nearly cost both their lives. That single second has been an unanswered question ever since. Now retired from Armstrong Research, Jesse finally has the means and the time to go back. Wayne Stinnett opens the 32nd Jesse McDermitt Caribbean Adventure with the specific pull of an unfinished thing: a mystery that has been waiting at the bottom of the Gulf Stream for over two hundred years, and for Jesse for eight years. 🌊
The request he receives at the Armstrong base on North Bimini—to head up a team of elite operatives with the goal of permanently deposing a corrupt sovereign nation’s leader—gives the novel its second narrative engine alongside the wreck investigation. Stinnett runs the dual storyline with the structural ease of a writer thirty-two books into a series: the diving investigation and the geopolitical mission develop in parallel without competing for the reader’s attention. 🤿
The shipwreck itself poses the questions that drive the novel’s mystery thread: what kind of vessel was lying in that deep dark trench? Who were her crew? How did they die? Is the curse real? Stinnett writes the Caribbean adventure series with the specific knowledge of a former Marine and experienced diver, and the Florida Straits setting is rendered with the authority of someone who has spent real time in this water. As a new release for the series’ devoted readership, this delivers everything they’ve come to expect from Jesse McDermitt across three decades of adventures. ⭐
Why this pulls you in: A shipwreck glimpsed for one second eight years ago, a two-hundred-year mystery waiting in the Gulf Stream, and a request to permanently depose a corrupt national leader—Jesse McDermitt’s 32nd Caribbean adventure.
Isabelle Thorne spent eleven years nursing her dying sister and emerged with nothing—no purpose, no prospects, no place in a world that quietly moved on without her. At eight-and-twenty she is, by society’s reckoning, invisible. Then a duke notices her. River Worthington, Duke of Thornbury, requires a wife for order and control, specifically one who will make no emotional demands on him whatsoever. Isabelle, who expects nothing and demands nothing, is perfect for his purposes. Julia Thorne opens the Practical Marriages series with the marriage-of-convenience premise given its most emotionally precise setup. 🌹
The specific cruelty of River’s logic—he chose her for her absence—is the novel’s central irony, and Thorne develops it with the patience it requires. The more time he spends with the quiet, self-effacing woman he selected precisely because she would not trouble him, the more he begins to see what she has hidden: the specific texture of a person who was never invisible, only treated as if she were. And the more Isabelle learns what it means to be actually seen by another person, the more dangerous it becomes to remain unnoticed. 💙
The dual awakening—his toward genuine feeling, hers toward believing she deserves it—is handled with real emotional intelligence. Thorne gives both River’s emotional guardedness and Isabelle’s self-effacement specific psychological roots rather than treating them as genre conventions to be cleared away by plot events. As a new release in the Practical Marriages series, this delivers exactly what the marriage-of-convenience readership comes for: genuine obstacles, genuine character development, and a resolution that earns its warmth. ⭐
Why this warms you: He chose her because she expected nothing—and then discovered she was everything he’d been protecting himself from—A Practical Marriage with a Spinster is new release Regency romance with genuine emotional depth.
Tommy Cordero is in the hospital—his lungs are shot—watching the door for his wife Denise, who has always known how to make an entrance. He is looking for comfort. She is looking for honesty. In forty-six years together, Tommy has provided for everything: the comfortable house, the cars, the vacations, the life their children needed. In his accounting, that should cover the occasional moment of weakness. Denise has a different accounting. Adriana Trigiani delivers a complete marriage in short story form with the economic precision that the format demands of its best practitioners. 💔
The hospital room gives the story its specific concentrated pressure—there is nowhere to go, no deferral available, and whatever Tommy assumed he could manage until it suited him to address it has arrived on its own timeline. Trigiani renders the dynamic between them with the specific authority of a writer who understands long marriages: the way decades of shared life creates both genuine intimacy and genuine blindness, the particular confidence of a man who believes he has been a good provider and the particular patience of a woman who has been waiting to be known. 💙
The revelation that Tommy is getting to know his wife for the very first time—after forty-six years—carries the weight that Trigiani builds toward with real craft. Short story form rewards compression and implication, and this story uses both without sacrificing the emotional specificity that makes the ending land. Trigiani is the bestselling author of *The Shoemaker’s Wife* and many other beloved novels, and this new release short story demonstrates the qualities that have built her devoted readership: warmth, honesty, and an unflinching eye for the truths that marriages accumulate and sometimes spend decades not saying. ⭐
Why this moves you: He wanted comfort; she came for honesty; forty-six years of marriage and he’s about to learn who his wife actually is—Adriana Trigiani’s new release short story with the emotional weight of a novel.





