Amanda Griffin has made a mistake. Or possibly a long series of them. First she gets drunk at her sister’s wedding and shares all her guilty secrets with Robert Castleman—definitively the worst possible man for that particular disclosure. Then at her cousin’s wedding she ends up in bed with him. At her best friend’s wedding they have a big, embarrassing fight. And then she gets stuck with him on the world’s most annoying road trip. The wedding circuit has not been kind to Amanda. 😄
Her heart has always belonged to a man she can never have, which means falling for Robert is not in the blueprint—it is just that she cannot seem to get away from him, and increasingly is not sure she wants to. Robert has spent his life watching from a distance and refusing to invest in relationships that will end up hurting him, which makes hooking up with his niece’s best friend exactly the kind of bad idea he should avoid. She is too young, too beautiful, too clever, and already in love with someone else. He will at least be smart with his heart. 💛
Noelle Adams writes romantic comedy with the character depth and earned emotional payoff that distinguishes her work within a genre that can skew light—the humor in The Mistake is genuine, but the damage underneath both characters is real enough to make the resolution feel like something worth arriving at rather than something inevitable from the first page. The Bad Bridesmaids series uses the wedding circuit as its organizing premise with enough wit to make the repeated disasters feel comic rather than contrived. ⚡
What makes this irresistible: Noelle Adams launches Bad Bridesmaids with a romantic comedy of genuine wit and warmth—drunk confessions, accidental bed-sharing, a humiliating fight, and the world’s most annoying road trip, all with the same man Amanda keeps insisting she will never fall for. 🌟
In 1797, Stephen and Jane Wyllie leave the familiarity of home behind, chasing the promise of a better life in the new state of Kentucky. The thousand perilous miles between them and that dream will demand every ounce of courage they possess—and will threaten the one thing they treasure most: each other. The American Wilderness Series launches with this devotion-tested frontier marriage at its center, which is a premise the historical romance genre handles with particular emotional power when the danger is genuine rather than decorative. 🌾
The wilderness of 1797 is not a romantic backdrop but an active antagonist—disease, hostile territory, exhaustion, and the accumulated pressure of a journey that strips away everything comfortable and tests what a marriage is actually made of. Dorothy Wiley writes the frontier with the period authenticity and physical specificity that distinguishes historical romance that has been thoroughly researched from historical romance that uses the past as costume. Stephen and Jane’s devotion to each other is tested in ways that make the eventual arrival—whatever form it takes—feel genuinely earned. 💛
Wiley’s American Wilderness Series has built a devoted readership across multiple books precisely because the frontier setting is rendered with enough historical texture to feel inhabited rather than imagined, and the marriages at the center of the stories are complex enough to carry the weight of the dangers that surround them. Wilderness Trail of Love establishes both the world and the emotional register of the series with the confidence of a first installment that knows exactly what it is. 🌅
What makes this essential: Dorothy Wiley launches the American Wilderness Series with a frontier historical romance of genuine emotional power—a devoted 1797 marriage, a thousand perilous miles of wilderness between home and Kentucky, and two people discovering what they are made of when everything comfortable has been stripped away. 🌟
Stacey Sullivan would love to trade places with her glamorous socialite best friend Jessica James—until she discovers Jessica murdered in her own home. Detective Rachel Storme was ready to trade her gun and badge for a gardener’s hat, but she reluctantly puts retirement on hold when she is pulled into the case. These two strangers from different generations—Stacey a millennial, Rachel a baby boomer—become unlikely partners in the pursuit of justice for a woman they both loved. 🔍
The partnership is tested almost immediately. Stacey insists her husband Matt is innocent despite evidence that suggests otherwise, while Rachel fights doggedly to build the case against him. The investigative dynamic that results—two women who need each other but keep working at cross purposes—gives the series its particular tension: not just the whodunit mechanics but the question of whether Stacey’s loyalty to Matt is devotion or delusion, and whether Rachel’s certainty is justice or stubbornness. The suspect field is genuinely populated—Jessica’s husband Grant, her jealous sister Georgette, the maid Rosa all carry their own weight. 💀
Alretha Thomas writes the Detective Rachel Storme series with the intergenerational partnership dynamic and character warmth that has given it its readership—the friendship between Stacey and Rachel is as central as the investigation, and the obstacles between them as revealing of character as the clues are of crime. Justice for Jessica launches the series with the full cast and the forward momentum of a first installment that knows exactly what kind of series it is building. 💛
What makes this gripping: Alretha Thomas launches the Detective Rachel Storme series with a mystery of genuine character depth—a millennial who discovered her glamorous BFF murdered, a retiring detective who can’t walk away, and an investigation that puts their unlikely friendship under maximum pressure before the truth comes out. 🌟
Pretty Poisoned (Gods of Tomorrow Duet Book 1)
Teagan Townsend is a college dropout obsessed with horror, true crime, and the occult, who prefers books to people, keeps her hookups casual, and her friendships nonexistent. Her current focus is jumpstarting her true crime podcast, which is what leads her to Gods of Tomorrow—an emerging rock band led by brothers Declan and Luca De Rossi, known for haunting lyrics, an extreme fanbase, and a literal appetite for blood. Girls go missing around them. People die under mysterious circumstances. Everyone looks the other way. 🌑
When Teagan gets a backstage pass, she goes in determined to expose them. She is, by any reasonable assessment, the perfect person for this investigation—no attachments, no illusions, a professional interest in exactly this category of darkness. The problem is that the closer she gets, the harder it becomes to see the De Rossi brothers for what they clearly are: dangerous, manipulative, and quite possibly killers. The dark rockstar romance premise here operates at the most unapologetic end of the subgenre—this is not a misunderstood bad boy but a genuinely dangerous one. 💀
Elle Mitchell writes Pretty Poisoned with the atmospheric darkness and moral complexity that the genre requires when it is taking its own premise seriously—a protagonist whose professional detachment is being systematically dismantled by an attraction she fully understands she should not be feeling, and antagonists whose menace is rendered without softening. ⚡
What makes this compelling: Elle Mitchell launches the Gods of Tomorrow Duet with a dark rockstar romance of genuine atmospheric menace—a true crime podcaster going undercover to expose a band whose fans keep dying, and the slow dissolution of her investigative detachment the closer she gets to the beautiful, dangerous truth. 🌟
For much of the past year, the liaison arrangement between the Columbus Police Department and the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation has sent Detective Reed Mattox and his K9 partner Billie across nearly every corner of Ohio on cases handpicked by the governor for political benefit. Reed has been growing increasingly wary of the arrangement—and when a body turns up in The Bottoms, where he and Billie used to work, he is more than willing to take the local case instead. Familiar territory, familiar colleagues, and a chance to bring justice for a young woman brutally murdered and displayed in a park for all to see. 🔍
The investigation has barely begun when other victims surface. The pattern takes shape with the specific dread that serial killer procedurals generate when the detective realizes the single case they came to solve is the opening reveal of something larger and more organized than anyone anticipated. The Bottoms setting—a familiar community now carrying something terrible—gives the investigation its personal stakes alongside its procedural momentum. 💀
Dustin Stevens writes the Reed and Billie series with the Columbus setting specificity and K9 partnership warmth that has built it a devoted readership across many installments. The Cat delivers the series’ established pleasures—a detective who knows his city, a K9 partner whose capabilities shape the work, and a case that demands everything both of them have—with the efficiency of a writer who has found his characters and trusts them fully. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Dustin Stevens delivers another Reed and Billie thriller of relentless procedural momentum—a return to familiar territory in The Bottoms, a brutally murdered young woman displayed for all to see, and the discovery that the one case they came to solve is only the first in a growing pattern. 🌟
Once a year, when the Queen attends the State Opening of Parliament, Scotland Yard’s elite squad must execute their most secret operation: transporting the Crown Jewels across London. For decades the operation has run like clockwork, and for decades it has been impenetrable. This year, a master criminal has set his sights on the most outrageous theft in history—and with a man on the inside, the odds are running in his favor. The Metropolitan Police have twenty-four hours to stop the crime of the century. ⚡
Jeffrey Archer constructs the heist thriller with the clean narrative architecture and escalating tension that has made the William Warwick series one of his most popular franchises. The Tower of London setting—home to the most valuable jewels on earth, theoretically impenetrable—and the specific vulnerability created by the annual parliamentary transport give the plot its elegant premise: a perfect security operation that contains, by necessity, one predictable window of exposure. 🔍
Archer writes with the propulsive pacing and institutional detail that the heist thriller genre demands—the Scotland Yard procedural machinery running against a criminal mastermind who has had more time to prepare than they have. William Warwick’s role in the investigation gives the novel its character continuity within the series while the heist premise delivers an entry point that works equally well for readers encountering the William Warwick world for the first time. 💡
What makes this propulsive: Jeffrey Archer delivers a William Warwick thriller of maximum heist tension—a master criminal targeting the Crown Jewels during their one annual moment of vulnerability, a man on the inside, and Scotland Yard’s twenty-four hours to stop the most audacious theft in the history of the Tower of London. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





