Barbara Gold is not your average grandmother. A former CIA operative now living in seemingly quiet retirement in Cheerville, she has a habit of stumbling into situations that her neighbors’ grandmothers definitely do not stumble into—and a skill set that makes her considerably better equipped to handle them than anyone would guess from looking at her. The fourth installment of the Secret Agent Granny series finds Barbara in another predicament that requires both tradecraft and the specific social camouflage of a sweet older woman that nobody takes seriously. 😄
Harper Lin’s series has built its readership on the comic gap between Barbara’s appearance and her capabilities—the cozy mystery convention of the amateur sleuth pushed to its logical and most entertaining extreme, where the amateur turns out to have classified training and a file at Langley. The humor is warm rather than sharp, the mysteries are genuinely constructed rather than decorative, and Barbara’s relationships with her family and the Cheerville community give the series its emotional grounding across four books. 💛
The Secret Agent Granny series belongs to the tradition of comic cozy mystery that takes its protagonist’s competence seriously even while mining the situational comedy of that competence being housed in someone the world systematically underestimates. Barbara’s age and her former career are both sources of humor and sources of genuine strategic advantage—she has seen things that have given her perspective, and she knows how to use the invisibility that older women are granted by a society that stops paying attention. The fourth book delivers the series’ established pleasures in full. 🌸
What makes this delightful: Harper Lin delivers the fourth Secret Agent Granny mystery with her signature comic warmth—a former CIA operative in grandmotherly disguise, another Cheerville situation that her neighbors’ grandmothers are definitely not equipped to handle, and a heroine who has been underestimated by more dangerous people than these. 🌟
Missy Stanton’s husband Tommy died in a railyard accident in Boston, leaving her alone in a city with no family and dimming prospects. In a moment of desperation she turns to the Matrimonial Times, where she encounters Pastor Jack Tibsdale of Birch River, Wyoming—a man who offers her a home and a marriage of friendship in exchange for her company in a mining town where every woman is already spoken for. She accepts. The fresh start seems possible. 💛
Jack is a good man navigating genuine loneliness—a pastor’s life in a rough mining town is not one that comes naturally equipped with companionship, and his motives for writing to a mail-order bride are entirely decent. What he discovers when Missy arrives is that the friendship he offered is already becoming something more: her kind soul and the resilience she carries through her grief are exactly what he had not let himself admit he was looking for. The marriage that began as a practical arrangement is quietly turning into something real. 🌾
The complication arrives when Missy discovers she is carrying Tommy’s child. The baby is coming whether or not she tells Jack, and she has fallen in love with a man who agreed to a marriage of friendship with a widow—not a widow who is also pregnant by her first husband. The question of how to tell him, and what she might lose in the telling, gives the novel its particular emotional stakes and drives it toward a resolution that the genre promises and these authors earn through genuine character work. 🌅
What makes this heartwarming: Amelia Rose and Kate Whitsby launch the Birch River Brides series with a mail-order bride romance of genuine warmth—a Boston widow, a Wyoming pastor offering friendship, a marriage that is already becoming love, and the secret she is carrying that changes everything she thought she knew about her future. 🌟
The honeymoon lasted until her con-artist husband sold her to werewolves. She escapes her captors and stumbles into Grayhaven—a secret supernatural settlement packed with biker demons, fae royals, and witches dealing in death-magic. It is not a safe destination, exactly, but it is a different kind of dangerous than the one she was running from, and different is what she needs right now. 🌑
The complication is that she is an omega—the least dominant werewolf in the supernatural hierarchy, which means she is powerless to refuse a direct order from any dominant wolf. The Grayhaven werewolf pack tracks her down before she has had time to figure out her situation, and the noose of impending capture tightens fast. What she expects is enslavement. What she gets instead is five dominant werewolves who take her in, protect her, and call her their mate—which is not a resolution she has any framework for trusting, given everything that has already happened to her on this honeymoon. 💔
Rita Stradling and Alexa B James build the Grayhaven series on the reverse harem wolf shifter premise with the specific emotional tension that makes the subgenre work at its best—a heroine whose vulnerability is structural rather than simply characterological, mates whose protection has to be earned as genuine before it can be believed, and a supernatural world rendered with enough internal consistency to give the stakes real weight. The Grayhaven setting—biker demons, fae royals, death-magic witches—gives the series its particular atmosphere and its promise of a world that gets stranger and richer as the arc develops. 🔥
What makes this compelling: Rita Stradling and Alexa B James launch the Grayhaven series with a wolf shifter reverse harem romance of genuine tension—a woman sold to werewolves on her honeymoon, an escape into a supernatural settlement, and five dominant wolves who call her mate when she was expecting chains. 🌟
The Moroccan Girl
Kit Carradine is a successful thriller writer who is approached by an MI6 officer with what is presented as a simple assignment: find a mysterious woman hiding somewhere in Marrakesh. The glamour of being recruited by British intelligence—the thing every thriller writer has imagined—lasts until Carradine discovers that the woman is Lara Bartok, a leading figure in Resurrection, a violent revolutionary movement whose attacks on right-wing public figures have generated fear and violence across Europe. The assignment is not simple. 🕵️
Bartok’s disappearance has ignited a race between warring intelligence services, each with different reasons for wanting to find her—and not all of them intending anything she would choose. Marrakesh, exotic and genuinely perilous, provides the atmospheric backdrop for a chase that keeps tightening. As Carradine edges closer to the truth about where Bartok is and why she disappeared, he finds himself drawn to her in ways that complicate every professional calculation: a brilliant, beautiful, profoundly complex woman whom the people hunting her would prefer dead. 💔
Charles Cumming—one of British spy fiction’s most acclaimed contemporary practitioners, widely compared to John le Carré for his psychological intelligence and moral seriousness—constructs the novel around the specific tension that the genre does best: an ordinary person pulled into a world whose rules he does not fully understand, making choices with consequences he cannot fully anticipate, falling for someone who may be exactly as dangerous as advertised. The choice Carradine ultimately faces—abandon Lara or risk everything—is handled with the moral weight it deserves. ⚡
What makes this gripping: Charles Cumming delivers a Marrakesh spy thriller of genuine moral complexity—a thriller writer recruited by MI6, a fugitive revolutionary that warring intelligence services all want dead, and a choice between professional survival and the woman he cannot abandon. 🌟
George is mostly happy—he loves his teaching job, he loves his daughter Suzi, and he sees her less than he would like. It feels like time for a change, and getting over Suzi’s mother is long overdue. He sets up an online dating profile and waits to see what the universe sends back, with the cautious optimism of a man who is ready to try again without being entirely sure he knows what he is trying for. 💛
Alice was happy until she found out her boyfriend had been lying to her. She returns to her hometown determined that this fresh start will actually work—the key is saying yes to things rather than retreating. Yes to her aunt’s spare room. Yes to writing for the local paper. Maybe yes, eventually, to falling in love again, when she has had enough time and enough small victories to trust that the ground beneath her is solid. The two of them are moving through the same small Irish world in parallel, their lives beginning to overlap more and more before they have any idea who the other person is. 🌿
Roisin Meaney writes contemporary Irish romance with the warmth and community texture that has made her one of the genre’s most beloved voices—novels where ordinary life is rendered with enough specific detail to feel genuinely inhabited, where the romance develops at the natural pace of two real people rather than the compressed timeline that plot convenience normally demands. The dual parallel structure—George and Alice each finding their way back to themselves before they find each other—gives the novel its particular emotional architecture: two people becoming ready for something at the same time, without knowing it yet. 🌅
What makes this heartwarming: Roisin Meaney delivers a contemporary Irish romance of genuine warmth—a widowed teacher ready to try again, a woman who came home to say yes to life, and two parallel stories that keep overlapping until the day they finally meet and everything changes. 🌟
Rachel Lindsay is in her early twenties, living in New York City, recently diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and working in advertising to secure the healthcare coverage her treatment requires. The job takes a strange turn when she is promoted onto the Pfizer account and finds herself developing ads for an anti-depressant—placed professionally on the other side of the curtain from her own experience as a psychiatric patient, in a position that generates the kind of self-scrutiny that her mania is not equipped to contain. 📖
She quits to become an artist. Her parents have her involuntarily hospitalized. The two weeks she spends in the psychiatric ward become the book’s structural and emotional core—an environment where she is trying to understand her own condition, navigate the institutional pressures of a system that is trying to help her in ways she does not always agree with, and find a path to a life that includes both her mental health needs and her creative ambitions. The tension between these things—staying well versus living the life she wants—is the tension the memoir refuses to resolve too easily. 💔
Rachel Lindsay tells this story in graphic novel form, which is not an arbitrary choice. The visual medium allows her to render the interior experience of mania and hospitalization in ways that prose alone cannot quite reach—the distortion of perception, the specific quality of institutional space, the gap between what is happening and what it feels like from inside. RX belongs to the tradition of graphic memoir that uses the form as an expressive necessity rather than a novelty, alongside work like Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home and Ellen Forney’s Marbles. 🌑
What makes this essential: Rachel Lindsay delivers a graphic memoir of striking emotional honesty—a bipolar diagnosis, an advertising job developing anti-depressant ads, involuntary hospitalization, and a two-week search for the path between staying well and living fully as herself. 🌟
… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3





