As an intern at the world’s only supernatural library—a place where the books don’t just hold creatures, they contain them—Paige’s one job is to make sure nothing inside gets out. She is not good at this job. One rainy afternoon and one too many pumpkin spice lattes later, she accidentally conjures a literal book boyfriend: Aries, king of all dragons, imprisoned in the stacks for longer than she has been alive. He is fire in the very literal sense—ripped abs, jaw like cut steel, and the genuine capacity to burn the building to the ground. The attraction between them is immediate and entirely mutual. The problem is that Aries wasn’t the only creature Paige set loose. Something else is stalking the hushed shelves of the Athenaeum, and unless they can reverse the damage, there will be no happily ever after for anyone—including them. Heather Hildenbrand delivers the dragon romantasy that readers are calling their new obsession. ✨
Hildenbrand and co-author Jessica Wayne build the supernatural library with genuine imagination—the hierarchy of creatures contained in books, the rules of the Athenaeum, the consequences of accidental releases—and Aries is exactly the grumpy dragon king the premise promises. The forced-proximity dynamic lands with real charm, and the humor is consistent throughout. Reviewers consistently report finishing and immediately hunting for Book 2. 🔍
Hildenbrand is a coastal Virginia author who writes paranormal and fantasy romance. The Accidental Alchemy series runs three completed books. This book contains explicit content. ⭐
Why this captivates: She accidentally freed the king of dragons from a supernatural library and unleashed something darker in the same afternoon—now they have to fix it together.
Nancy Yoder’s sons are both married, and her attention has now turned fully—some would say intensely—toward her oldest daughter at home. Rose is nearly twenty, which in Nancy’s estimation is already past the point of urgency, and her mother’s declaration is unambiguous: one year to find a husband, or Nancy finds one for her. Rose is not opposed to marriage; she just hasn’t met the right man yet and believes love will arrive when it’s ready. Shortly after this conversation, she meets Jacob—charming, handsome, and seemingly everything she pictured. The two grow close quickly. Then Rose learns something scandalous about Jacob that devastates her, and she turns to the one person who has always been there: her good friend Mark. Is Mark the man she should have been looking for all along, or does Jacob deserve a second chance? Samantha Price opens the Amish Love Blooms series with the warm, clean romance that readers of Amish fiction describe as a perfect series starter. 💕
Price writes with the gentle warmth and uncomplicated prose that defines the best of the Amish romance genre—the community texture, the family dynamics, the quiet tension between personal feelings and communal expectations. The dynamic between Rose and Mark has the specific sweet frustration of two people who have been too close to see clearly. Clean and wholesome throughout; no violence or adult content. 🔍
Price is a USA Today bestselling author who was raised in the Brethren faith and writes with an authentic understanding of Amish life. The Amish Love Blooms series runs six books, all standalone. ⭐
Why this charms: Her mother gave her one year, she thought she found the one, and the man who was right in front of her the whole time is starting to look considerably more interesting.
In a small town where every street holds a memory and every sunrise carries the promise of new beginnings, two hearts shaped by loss meet in the most unexpected way. Both have been changed by life—marked by grief, by wrong turns, by the kind of wounds that make trusting again feel like a risk not worth taking. When their paths cross in the town that has quietly witnessed them both, something cautious and tentative begins to grow between them. Just as they start to trust the fragile early days of that connection, old fears resurface and each must decide whether to retreat into the safety of the past or risk stepping into an uncharted future. Catherine Miller delivers the heartfelt later-in-life romance that opens the In the Midst of Mercy series with a gentle but compelling story woven through with a subtle Gospel thread. 💙
Miller writes with the specific emotional patience that later-in-life romance requires—the characters here are not naive about what love costs, and the story honors that without letting it become a wall. The small-town setting is rendered with warmth, and the faith elements are present throughout without being heavy-handed. Clean and wholesome; no explicit content. For readers who believe in second chances and the quiet work of grace. 🔍
Miller is an American-born author whose In the Midst of Mercy series opens with this book. The series continues with Promise at Briarwood. Perfect for fans of Denise Hunter and Susan May Warren. ⭐
Why this moves you: Two people shaped by loss and fear, a small town that holds their stories, and the slow, courageous work of learning to trust again.
The Rum Diary
Paul Kemp arrives in Puerto Rico in the late 1950s to write for a failing English-language newspaper staffed by drunks, dreamers, and the professionally lost. San Juan is a city in the grip of American money and influence—casinos being built, land being carved up, a native population getting precisely none of the benefits—and Kemp arrives with enough journalistic instinct to see all of it and enough personal chaos to do very little about it. He falls in with a corrupt real estate scheme, falls harder for his colleague’s girlfriend, and drinks with the focused commitment of a man who has not yet decided whether he is building toward something or burning it all down. Hunter S. Thompson wrote The Rum Diary in his early twenties, before he became famous, and published it forty years later. The rawness is entirely intentional. 📚
What the novel offers that Fear and Loathing doesn’t is the texture of a young man’s moral reckoning—Kemp is not yet the persona Thompson would eventually construct, just a writer watching American capitalism eat a beautiful island alive and trying to find the language for his outrage before it calcifies into something more controlled. The prose has Thompson’s instinctive rhythm without the full gonzo apparatus. For readers who want to understand where he started, this is the essential text. 🔍
Thompson wrote The Rum Diary in 1959 and it was finally published in 1998. The 2011 film adaptation starred Johnny Depp. ⭐
Why this matters: The novel Hunter S. Thompson wrote before he was Hunter S. Thompson—Puerto Rico, rum, American greed, and a young journalist trying to find his voice before it found him—for $1.99.
The toddler years don’t have to be terrible. They feel that way because most parenting resources skim past this stage entirely or treat it as something to survive rather than understand. Devon Kuntzman—Instagram’s original toddler parenting coach, trusted by over one million parents and caregivers worldwide—built her reputation on the insight that toddler behavior is not bad behavior. It’s developmentally normal behavior that requires a developmentally appropriate response. In Transforming Toddlerhood, she delivers the practical guide she wishes had existed when the families she works with first needed it: bite-sized chapters, easy-to-use scripts, red flags to watch for, and actionable tools for the 27 most common toddler challenges, from tantrums and hitting to sleep struggles and potty training. 📚
The approach is grounded in brain science and positive discipline without being preachy or idealistic—Kuntzman doesn’t sugarcoat the chaos, she just gives you the tools to meet it with less frustration and more connection. The book covers how to set limits while staying patient, how to end power struggles, how to support emotional regulation in kids ages 1 to 5, and how to stop parenting against your toddler’s development and start working with it. Jamie Glowacki called it “a refreshingly grounded guide for anyone in the thick of toddlerhood.” 🔍
Kuntzman is an ICF-certified coach, a Certified Gentle Sleep Coach, and holds a psychology degree focused on child development. Foreword by Tina Payne Bryson. ⭐
Why this helps: The Instagram toddler coach trusted by a million parents finally wrote the book—practical tools, real scripts, and brain science that makes sense at 6am—for $1.99.
1885. Buck Reed rides into Dodd City, Texas, carrying decades of gunslinging history and one simple dream: peace on the land he’s claimed as his own. He’s done with the violence. He’s earned the right to stop. The frontier has other plans. Squatters have taken over his property. A ruthless local rancher intends to drive him out permanently. And every hotheaded young gun in the territory wants to make his reputation by being the one who put down Buck Reed. With his back against the wall and his past reputation following him like a shadow he can’t outrun, Buck has to face the hardest question any gunfighter ever faces: can you lay down the gun for good, or does surviving what’s coming require becoming the thing you were trying to leave behind? Monty R. Garner delivers the gritty standalone western that fans of Louis L’Amour have been waiting for. 🔍
Garner writes with the authentic frontier texture that comes from a lifetime of genuine connection to the land, horses, and history of the American West—he’s a member of the Western Writers of America and writes real places and landmarks into every story. The central tension between redemption and survival gives Buckshot its moral weight, and the action delivers everything the genre promises. 💙
Garner was born and raised in southeastern Oklahoma and is the author of the Sawyer McCade series in addition to this standalone. Perfect for fans of William W. Johnstone and Max Brand. ⭐
Why this grips you: A retired gunfighter tries to build a peaceful life in 1885 Texas—and every force in the territory conspires to remind him why he was good at the other thing—for $1.99.
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