Since Coco Pinchard’s messy divorce from Daniel, she hasn’t just picked up the pieces—she’s now a bestselling author basking in critical acclaim and commercial success, and living in a newly-wed glow with her gorgeous second husband Adam after overcoming the shocking secrets that almost destroyed their relationship. She feels stronger and wiser than she was in her first marriage, and surely the second time around she’ll have learned from her mistakes and avoided the pitfalls that destroyed her first attempt at happily ever after. 💍
But things aren’t going quite to plan despite Coco’s confidence. Adam has lost his job in an economic downturn, putting financial pressure on their household. Coco’s grown-up son Rosencrantz seems to have derailed his life in spectacular fashion again, making choices that baffle and worry his mother. Ex-mother-in-law Ethel keeps letting herself into the house thanks to an endless supply of spare keys Coco can’t seem to confiscate. When literary agent Angie takes on Coco’s arch rival, the formidable Regina Battenberg, it looks as though professional competition will make things worse. And then Coco discovers she’s pregnant—at 44. 👶
So much has changed since she was pregnant in her twenties. Can she really do it all again: the sleepless nights, the stretch marks on top of existing stretch marks, and the sheer responsibility of bringing a new life into the world when she thought she was done with that chapter? Robert Bryndza delivers the third Coco Pinchard installment examining midlife pregnancy, second marriage complications, and whether wisdom gained from past mistakes actually helps when life throws entirely new challenges your way. 😰
What makes this essential: The third Coco Pinchard romantic comedy where bestselling author and newlywed Coco discovers she’s pregnant at 44—while Adam loses his job, son Rosencrantz derails spectacularly, ex-mother-in-law Ethel keeps invading with spare keys, and literary agent takes on arch rival Regina Battenberg, forcing Coco to question if she can do sleepless nights and stretch marks again.
On his 40th birthday, Quint Adler gets into a fight at his local bar over something stupid and alcohol-fueled, ending up in the hospital with injuries that seem minor but require overnight observation. What he overhears in the hospital—a conversation between doctors or nurses that wasn’t meant for his ears—will send this jaded crime reporter out on his craziest case yet, one that makes his usual coverage of petty crime and local corruption look tame by comparison. 🏥
One person ends up dead under suspicious circumstances. Then another death occurs that seems unrelated but shares disturbing similarities. And finally, a third victim, completing a pattern that Quint can’t ignore even as everyone else dismisses the connections. Before he knows it, Quint has become the main suspect in the murders because his investigation has put him at every crime scene, his reporter’s curiosity making him look guilty to law enforcement that doesn’t understand or appreciate his methodology. 🔍
And he knows that the people in power—the ones who actually committed these murders and have resources Quint can’t match—will never let him get out of this alive. They’ve already killed three times to protect whatever secret Quint stumbled onto in that hospital, and they won’t hesitate to make him the fourth victim. Brian O’Sullivan launches the Quint Thrillers series with private investigator mystery where the protagonist isn’t officially a PI but a crime reporter whose 40th birthday bar fight leads to hospital eavesdropping that pulls him into conspiracy where being right might get him killed. ⚠️
What makes this essential: A private investigator thriller launching Quint series where jaded crime reporter Quint Adler’s 40th birthday bar fight lands him in the hospital where he overhears something that launches his craziest case—three deaths that make him the main suspect, forcing him to prove his innocence while knowing the people in power will never let him survive uncovering their secret.
His team believes him Zen. His boss finds him obsessive. Suspects think him gorgeous but dangerous. They’re all right. Chief Inspector Gray James is sculpting the remembered likeness of his small son when he receives the call—a faceless corpse is found hanging by the choppy river, swirls of snow and sand rolling like tumbleweeds in the harsh Montreal winter. The victim’s face has been removed with surgical precision, making identification nearly impossible and suggesting a killer with either medical knowledge or a very specific message to send. ❄️
Montreal glitters with the beauty of a city in winter: cobbled streets slippery with ice, historic architecture dusted with snow, and the mighty St. Lawrence jetting eastward past the city carrying chunks of ice. But beneath this picturesque surface, someone is methodically killing the founders of a booming medical tech startup—targeting successful entrepreneurs one by one in murders that escalate in brutality. The investigation propels Gray into a downward spiral that shatters his hard-earned peace, that risks his very life, that threatens to force him to care and face what he has shunned all along: his hand in the storm that destroyed his previous life and killed his son. 🌊
From the prize-winning author comes a psychological, page-turning mystery with all the elements one needs on a rainy night: a complex murder investigation with medical tech conspiracy, a noble yet haunted detective whose Zen exterior masks profound trauma, and an evocative Montreal setting to sink into. Ritu Sethi launches the Chief Inspector Gray James series examining how detectives who’ve lost everything cope with cases that force them to feel again, and whether solving murders can ever compensate for the guilt of failing to prevent the one that mattered most. 🔍
What makes this essential: A police procedural launching Chief Inspector Gray James series where the Zen detective sculpting his dead son’s likeness receives a call about a faceless corpse by Montreal’s choppy river—launching investigation into someone systematically killing medical tech startup founders, propelling Gray into downward spiral that shatters his hard-earned peace and forces him to face his hand in the storm.
All My Fault
There’s a knock at the door—it’s every mother’s worst nightmare. The police are here with news that will shatter everything. They tell me my beautiful daughter Charlotte has been hurt badly, critically, and they’ll take me to the hospital where there’s no time to lose. And I know this must be all my fault because we argued so badly the last time we spoke, words said in anger that I can never take back now. 🚪
Charlotte and I argued about her boyfriend Freddie—I was just worried about her, trying to protect her from what I saw as a toxic relationship, but she refused to hear me out and accused me of interference. Now she’s lying pale, still and silent in a hospital bed, and I’m convinced this was no accident. The police should be questioning Freddie, the boyfriend I never thought was good enough for her. Did he hurt my daughter? Guilt floods through me again and again with every breath she doesn’t take. If we hadn’t argued, she wouldn’t have been with him today. If I had listened instead of lecturing, I could have been there for her. 💔
But I didn’t listen, and instead she pushed me away. I didn’t even know my darling girl was pregnant until the doctors told me after the accident. And now she’s lost forever—the doctors say she will never wake up, that the only part of her they can save is her unborn child. Emma Robinson delivers women’s literary fiction examining maternal guilt, the impossible choices of life support decisions, and whether saving a grandchild can ever compensate for losing a daughter when every decision feels like betrayal. 👶
What makes this essential: Women’s literary fiction where a mother’s worst nightmare arrives with police at the door—daughter Charlotte lies critically injured after their terrible argument about boyfriend Freddie, guilt flooding as doctors say Charlotte will never wake but her unborn child (that mom didn’t even know existed) can be saved, forcing impossible choices about life support.
England, 1635. Ten-year-old Thomazine Heron’s life is shattered when a deadly illness robs her of her father and brother, leaving her an orphan and heiress. Torn from her beloved home and sent to live with distant relatives at the grand Goldhayes estate in Suffolk, Thomazine must adjust to a new world of unfamiliar faces, rigid expectations, and buried family secrets that nobody will explain to a grieving child who just wants to understand why everything changed. 🏰
As she comes of age during the turbulent years leading to the English Civil War, Thomazine’s journey is one of transformation—from spirited child to determined young woman fiercely loyal to those she loves and unwilling to submit to the dictates of society that would have her marry for advantage rather than affection. As Thomazine grows into young womanhood at Goldhayes amidst the tightening grip of civil unrest, her path crosses with Francis Heron, her cousin by blood but her equal in spirit. What begins as childhood camaraderie deepens over the years into a bond laced with tension, loyalty, and a love neither of them dares name. ⚔️
In a time when duty and bloodlines dictate fate, Thomazine finds herself torn between the world she was born into and the one her heart longs to claim. Pamela Belle launches The Heron Quartet with Tudor historical romance set against English Civil War backdrop, examining how family ties are tested, political allegiances shift, and forbidden love between cousins creates impossible choices when society’s rules conflict with the heart’s demands. 💕
What makes this essential: Tudor historical romance launching The Heron Quartet where ten-year-old orphaned heiress Thomazine Heron is sent to Goldhayes estate in 1635, growing into determined young womanhood during English Civil War years as childhood camaraderie with cousin Francis deepens into forbidden love neither dares name when duty and bloodlines dictate fate but hearts demand otherwise.
In a blink, I found myself in an unknown land greeted by the textbox of an unfriendly system that wanted me to become a great hero, save the world, win the love of the people and all that crap. But this new world already had a hero doing that job, so why should I bust my ass dealing with dragons and the unknown for people I didn’t know? Let him deal with saving the world—it’s his job. So instead of being tempted by the system’s nonsense about destiny and heroic quests, I chose a simple class that the system clearly considered beneath notice: Potion maker. 🧪
I wasn’t interested in cultivating mana and defying the heavens, courting death in epic battles, none of that dangerous crap the system kept trying to push me toward. Unfortunately, the town I spawned near was suffering crippling inflation with merchants and people leaving because they lacked high-demand businesses that could sustain the local economy. The town would soon be going under, and with it, my comfortable existence as the guy who just wanted to make potions in peace. Not if I have anything to say about it—turns out economic salvation through entrepreneurship is way more interesting than slaying dragons. 💰
But will it be that easy to escape fate when the system designed this world for heroes, not potion-making capitalists? Alvin Atwater launches Rise of the Cheat Potion Maker with LitRPG that subverts the “chosen one” narrative by having the protagonist actively reject heroism in favor of running a successful business, proving that sometimes the real adventure is stabilizing the local economy and min-maxing your profit margins. 📊
What makes this essential: A LitRPG saga where the protagonist transported to a fantasy world rejects the system’s demands to become a hero (they already have one) and chooses Potion Maker class instead, discovering the town near his spawn point suffers crippling inflation—forcing him to save the local economy through entrepreneurship rather than dragon-slaying, escaping fate through capitalism.
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





