Post-war England is a world in transition, and Mary Adams is transitioning with it—from wartime factory worker to maid in one of the grand estates that still dot the countryside, carrying their secrets and their pretensions into a new era that doesn’t quite know what to do with either. Mary is clever, observant, and entirely capable of navigating the hierarchy of a household like this. What she is not prepared for is what happens when her employer’s attentions turn unwanted. 🏛️
She refuses him clearly and without ambiguity. The next morning, he is found dead. And because she was the last person to speak with him under circumstances that required explanation, Mary becomes the prime suspect in a murder investigation that the local authorities seem very interested in wrapping up quickly—with her as the most convenient answer. 🔍
She has two things working in her favor: a sharp mind that spent the war years solving problems under pressure, and the run of a mansion full of clues that the police have not looked at carefully enough. The real killer is somewhere in this house—among the staff, the family, the guests—and Mary is the only one motivated to find them. Every room she cleans is an opportunity. Every conversation is a potential lead. 🕯️
What makes this engrossing: Fiona Grace sets this women’s sleuth mystery in a richly realized post-war England, with a heroine whose working-class intelligence and wartime resourcefulness make her exactly the right person to unravel a crime the establishment would prefer to pin on the nearest convenient suspect—atmospheric, clever, and compulsively readable. 🌟
Ella has three immediate problems: her new coworker is as attractive as he is cranky, a mischievous cat has decided without consulting her that she needs a familiar, and she has just discovered she is a witch with the ability to read the emotional hologram of a magical death—which is, as abilities go, both extraordinary and deeply inconvenient given the current circumstances. The current circumstances being five dead bodies with no obvious connection. 🃏
She has landed a job at a casino, which turns out to be considerably more magical than the average gambling establishment, and considerably more dangerous. The investigation she has been dragged into requires her to navigate her newly discovered mage abilities—which she has not yet mastered and which have a tendency to express themselves at unexpected moments—alongside a topless burlesque show, a jealous girlfriend with opinions about everything, gamblers of every supernatural variety, and magical chocolate cake whose properties she has not fully tested. 🎰
The murderer is somewhere in this casino, working through a list that may very well have Ella’s name on it. She needs to identify them before they identify her as a loose end. She also needs to do this without accidentally setting herself or anyone else on fire, which is apparently a real risk at her current skill level. The cranky coworker is not helping. The cat is not helping either, but is at least providing emotional support of the most judgmental variety. 🐱
What makes this a blast: Nikki Haverstock packs two complete paranormal mysteries into this boxset—sharp, funny, and inventive, with a heroine discovering her powers at the worst possible moment and a casino setting that makes every scene crackle with unpredictable energy. Perfect for fans of witchy mysteries with real bite. ✨
Hannah hits a man with her car. It is dark, it happens fast, and there is no question about what just occurred—she felt it, she saw it, and she stops immediately. Then the body and all the blood disappear without a trace, as if neither ever existed. The police find nothing. The road is empty. Hannah is left with the absolute certainty of what happened and zero evidence that it did, which is the kind of situation that makes a person start seriously questioning their own grip on reality. 😨
She doesn’t accept the easy explanation. She searches instead, exhaustively and obsessively, until she finds him—alive, unharmed, and entirely unbothered by the fact that a car hit him at speed. The stranger takes her in and explains what she has stumbled into: he is part of an ancient race of immortals, which answers one question and opens approximately fifty more. The most pressing of these is introduced immediately. 👁️
His sister is also immortal. His sister is also deranged. And his sister murders every person who learns the secret—a policy she enforces with the calm efficiency of someone who has been doing it for a very long time and sees no reason to stop. Hannah is tough, resourceful, and determined in ways that have served her well in ordinary circumstances. The question of how those qualities translate when the enemy literally cannot die is one she is now urgently required to answer. 🌑
What makes this compelling: A.M. Caplan launches the Echoes Trilogy with a supernatural thriller that moves at relentless pace—a heroine who refuses the comfortable lie, an immortal world that has its own brutal internal logic, and a villain whose invulnerability makes every confrontation feel genuinely, bone-deep dangerous.
I Came Back for You
Ten years after her daughter Melanie was murdered, Bree Winter has finally done the impossible: she has begun to move forward. New love, a new home, the tentative architecture of a new beginning. Then a convicted killer makes a deathbed confession that dismantles everything she thought she had put to rest. He admits to four murders without hesitation. But not Melanie’s. Not her daughter. 😨
Bree’s first instinct is disbelief. So is her ex-husband’s. The man was convicted. The case was closed. And yet the inconsistencies that surface in the days that follow are not the kind that can be explained away, and the dreadful feeling that he might actually be telling the truth refuses to go away no matter how hard Bree pushes back against it. Someone else killed her daughter. Someone who was never caught. Someone who may still be out there. 😰
Doing anything about that means returning to the upstate New York town where Melanie died—walking back into the trauma Bree has spent a decade carefully surviving—and digging through a past she believed she understood completely. What she finds instead calls into question not just who killed Melanie, but who Melanie actually was. The daughter Bree thought she knew had secrets. The town has more. And the nightmare Bree thought she was finally leaving behind has barely begun. 🌑
What makes this gripping: Kate White constructs a psychological thriller of exceptional precision—a mother’s love weaponized into relentless investigation, a cold case that keeps generating new revelations, and a heroine whose grief makes her both vulnerable and unstoppable in equal measure. A genuinely unsettling and compulsively readable new release. 🔍
She runs a lavender farm in a small town. The paparazzi have absolutely no reason to be interested in her—until her identical twin sister lands the movie role of a lifetime and the film shoots directly in her backyard. Suddenly her quiet life is considerably less quiet, and the studio has sent a bodyguard to keep the cameras off her porch. Naturally, it’s him. The broody, tattooed almost-one-night-stand who slipped out before anything actually happened last month. 🌾
She would very much like to stay angry about that. He keeps making it difficult by being excellent at his job—rescuing her from sneaky photographers at the market, then the coffee shop, then what feels like everywhere she goes. He is professional. He is competent. He has wicked eyes and a mouth she has thought about more than she would ever admit out loud. By the third rescue, righteous indignation is getting genuinely hard to sustain. 💜
Then he moves into the cottage at her farm. With her. One bed. The tension that has been building since the moment he showed up on her porch finds its inevitable conclusion—and one night becomes another, and then another, and somewhere along the way late-night secrets and soft confessions start getting said that neither of them entirely planned. He’s leaving when the job ends. She’s staying. The summer has a hard stop, and both of them know it. 💔
What makes this irresistible: Lauren Blakely delivers a sparkling small-town romance with all the tropes handled exactly right—forced proximity, one bed, a bodyguard hero worth the wait, and a heroine whose lavender farm life makes the sweetest possible backdrop for a summer love story that refuses to stay uncomplicated. 🌸
Jameson Knight arrives at precisely the same time every day to pick up his young daughter from school. He smiles when she runs into his arms—genuinely, completely, in a way that transforms his entire face. It’s the only time she has ever seen him smile. As his daughter’s teacher, she has noticed this. She has noticed other things about Jameson Knight too, and she has been very careful not to act on any of them. 😶
Then a bullet flies past them both at recess, and the careful professional distance she has maintained collapses in an instant. She throws herself in front of his daughter without thinking. The next thing she knows, Jameson is pulling her out of the school and into his car with the calm urgency of a man who makes security decisions for a living and has already decided what happens next. What happens next, apparently, is his estate. 😰
The offer is straightforward enough on its surface: stay as his daughter’s live-in nanny until the threat is neutralized and a permanent solution is in place. It will be temporary. It will be professional. He promises it will be easy. The estate is the most beautiful home she has ever seen. Jameson Knight is the most complicated man she has ever been in close proximity to, and easy is not a word that applies to a single moment of their arrangement. 🔥
What makes this addictive: Shain Rose builds slow-burn tension with surgical precision—a brooding, protective hero whose rare smiles say everything, a heroine thrust into danger and desire in equal measure, and a forced-proximity setup that delivers on every promise from the first locked gate to the last stunning revelation. ❤️🔥





