Buy Now
Author: HJ Bellus
FREE
Sports Romance

🏈 Going home should be easy—just not when you’re returning to the small town that gave you roots and broke your heart, forced back by the death of the man who raised you. HJ Bellus delivers second-chance sports romance with heavy emotional stakes, where our heroine left everything behind and never looked back until tragedy makes avoidance impossible. The one-horse town of Boone holds all her old wounds, and seeing Jessie—her former best friend and love of her life who shattered her world graduation night—almost brings her to her knees.

💔 That graduation night betrayal hangs over everything unspoken but devastating. Bellus excels at emotional gut-punches, and the setup promises both heartbreak flashbacks and present-day reckoning. Jessie ruined it all “for me…for us” suggests his actions didn’t just hurt her but destroyed potential futures they’d planned together. The sports romance angle (Jessie’s likely a hometown hero athlete) creates additional complication—he probably stayed, thrived, became exactly who he was supposed to be, while she fled and rebuilt herself far from everything they’d shared.

🔥 The secret she’s been keeping threatens to rattle the tiny town—pregnancy? A child Jessie doesn’t know about? Something that explains why she never came back even for visits? Bellus sets up maximum angst: forced proximity in a town too small to avoid each other, unresolved feelings that never died despite years of distance, and a truth that could either heal or destroy whatever’s left between them. The Yesterday Series title suggests this first book confronts the past before moving toward healing and future.

Why this grips me: Bellus writes emotional sports romance that doesn’t shy from genuine pain—her characters earn their happy endings through actual growth and forgiveness rather than just physical chemistry. For readers who loved Kennedy Fox’s Checkmate duet or Ilsa Madden-Mills’s Dear Ava, this delivers similar gut-wrenching intensity: small-town setting where everyone knows your business, second chances that require confronting what broke you the first time, and secrets that explode everything you thought you knew about your own story.

Buy Now
Author: J.M. Barrie
FREE
Coming of Age Fiction

✨ All children, except one, grow up—and J.M. Barrie’s 1911 masterpiece asks the eternal question: which one will you be? Peter Pan whisks the Darling children away from their London nursery to Neverland, a fantastical island populated by Lost Boys, mermaids, pirates, and the villainous Captain Hook. This isn’t just adventure fantasy but profound exploration of the enduring power of imagination and the bittersweet nature of growing up. Barrie created something remarkable: a children’s story that children adore for its adventure and adults cherish for its melancholy wisdom about what we lose when we leave childhood behind.

🧚 The “faith, trust, and pixie dust” formula captures Neverland’s magic, but Barrie’s genius lies in the shadows beneath the whimsy. Peter is eternally young but also eternally alone, unable to form lasting attachments or remember past adventures. Wendy must choose between remaining a child in Neverland or accepting the responsibilities and losses of adulthood. Captain Hook represents grown-up villainy—sophisticated, cruel, and obsessed with revenge against a boy who embodies everything he’s lost. The crocodile that swallowed a clock ticks toward us all, time itself the real villain in a story about refusing to grow up.

🏴‍☠️ Barrie’s prose balances playful adventure with genuine poignancy. The mischievous Lost Boys and beautiful mermaids provide fantasy escapism, while Wendy’s eventual return to London and Peter’s inability to stay carry real emotional weight. “To live is an awfully big adventure” isn’t just inspiring—it’s acknowledgment that life itself requires the kind of courage and faith we associate with childhood play. The story works as pure entertainment for young readers while offering adults meditation on memory, mortality, and the price we pay for growing up.

Why this endures: Over a century later, Peter Pan remains culturally omnipresent—referenced, adapted, reinterpreted—because Barrie tapped into something universal about the tension between innocence and experience. This is essential reading not just as children’s literature history but as genuinely moving exploration of what we gain and lose as we age. For readers rediscovering classics or introducing them to new generations, Barrie’s Neverland proves that the best children’s literature speaks truth adults need to hear.

Buy Now
Author: Leigh James
FREE
Billionaire Arranged Marriage Romance

💍 This wasn’t how she pictured her wedding day—sold to a man who won’t even look at her. Bryce Windsor is rich, ruthless, twice her age, and a billionaire recluse who needs a wife for reasons he refuses to share. Leigh James delivers dark arranged marriage romance with genuine unease: our virgin heroine married him to save her brother from foster care, and she can never break their contract or they’ll lose everything. The power imbalance is extreme—age gap, wealth disparity, her desperate circumstances versus his calculated needs—creating thriller tension alongside romantic possibility.

🏰 Bryce says he doesn’t care who she is, only that she belongs to him. That she’s untouched. That she’ll stay. No matter what. Those three requirements reveal obsession disguised as indifference—a man claiming he doesn’t care while simultaneously demanding total possession and purity. James sets up the central mystery: if he truly doesn’t care about her personally, why the specific demands? Why virgin? Why her? The “no matter what” clause promises dark revelations about what he’s actually purchased with this marriage contract and what he’s willing to do to keep her.

🌙 Then someone starts coming to her bedroom at night. Watching her. And she thinks it’s him—which means that despite his claims of indifference, what her new husband actually wants is her. James layers gothic suspense over arranged marriage romance: the reclusive billionaire, the isolated mansion (presumably), the watching presence in darkness, and a heroine trapped by contract trying to understand the man who owns her legally but claims to want nothing from her emotionally. The trilogy structure promises this first book establishes the twisted contract, subsequent books unravel why he needed her specifically, and the final book confronts whether possession can transform into genuine love.

What compels me here: James writes dark romance that embraces its gothic thriller elements—this isn’t soft billionaire romance but genuine suspense about a heroine trapped by circumstances with a man whose motivations remain opaque and possibly disturbing. For readers who loved Penelope Douglas’s Credence or Sierra Simone’s New Camelot trilogy, this delivers similar dark pleasures: morally gray heroes, heroines with limited options, and the question of whether a relationship founded on coercion and contract can evolve into something real—or whether it was always something real disguised as transaction.

Still Yours (Falcon Haven)

Buy Now
Author: SK Allison
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Small Town Romance

💔 Stone Williams left Falcon Haven as the bad boy who broke her heart without a goodbye—now he’s back as Manhattan’s most ruthless billionaire, all sharp edges and fancy suits. Through a twist of fate, she’s stuck living in the same house as him, and the boy who used to sneak through her window is still visible beneath the polished exterior. That stray kitten he named Moo remembers him, and so does her traitorous heart. SK Allison delivers second-chance romance with genuine emotional stakes—this isn’t just about rekindling attraction but confronting why he left and whether forgiveness is even possible.

🏘️ The forced proximity of sharing a house creates delicious tension because Stone insists he’s there for reasons that don’t include her—yet he backs her against kitchen counters and kisses her until her knees go weak, then acts like she’s the one who can’t stay away. That contradiction between his words and actions drives the emotional conflict. He admits the other guy would be “better for her,” but doesn’t care—he hasn’t had his fill yet. It’s possessive and honest and messy in all the ways real desire is messy, complicated by a decade of hurt feelings and unanswered questions.

💪 What makes this work is the heroine’s backbone: she gave up everything once for people she loved, buried her dreams in this small town, convinced herself she was fine. She’s built a good life that doesn’t include billionaire bad boys who break hearts, and she’s determined that this time, she won’t be left behind. Allison creates genuine conflict because both characters have legitimate grievances and genuine growth to do—this isn’t just about physical attraction but about whether two people who’ve changed can find their way back to each other without one of them sacrificing everything again.

Here’s what grabbed me: The detail about the cat remembering him is perfect—animals don’t lie, and if Moo still loves Stone, maybe there’s more to him than heartless billionaire. For readers who loved Devney Perry’s small-town romances or Vi Keeland’s second-chance billionaires, this delivers both: the intimacy of everyone knowing your history combined with the power imbalance of vast wealth differences, all wrapped in the question of whether love is worth risking your heart a second time.

Buy Now
Author: Micky Carre
Regularly $4.99, Today $2.49
Humorous Science Fiction

💥 Our protagonist volunteers for three days of cryostasis to make quick cash—and wakes up to discover the world had an all-out nuclear war while he was frozen. Oops. Micky Carre delivers post-apocalyptic adventure with a distinctly humorous bent: destruction on such scale that physics itself changed, massive mutants hunting for meals, violent gangs fighting for control, human-animal hybrids, and oh yeah, magic is suddenly real. The protagonist’s bemused “I’m still trying to process that one” perfectly captures the tone—this is apocalypse with jokes, where horror and absurdity coexist.

🏗️ The base-building element gives structure to survival: a small society takes him in, teaches him the ropes, and gives him hope for a future. Now he’s starting his own settlement using everything he learned, transforming it into a fortress. Carre understands the appeal of building something from nothing in hostile territory—it’s not just survival but creation, imposing order on chaos. The progression from lone survivor to community builder to fortress designer provides satisfying gameplay-style advancement that readers of LitRPG and base-building fiction crave.

🔥 The romantic element (“find a good woman or two to keep me warm at night”) and the immediate pivot to fighting mutants captures the book’s energy—survival and romance both matter, and neither apologizes for being genre fiction having fun with its premise. The mix of threats (mutants, gangs, mysterious hybrid societies, magical dangers) creates variety beyond just fighting zombies. Our hero’s not just hiding and scrounging; he’s actively building something worth defending and finding people worth fighting for.

What makes this fun: Carre commits fully to the premise without drowning in grimdark despair. This is apocalypse where you can still crack jokes, build cool stuff, romance interesting women, and occasionally murder mutants. For readers who loved Dakota Krout’s Completionist Chronicles or enjoyed the settlement-building in Fallout games, this delivers similar pleasures: progression, construction, combat, and the satisfaction of creating civilization in the ruins of the old world—with magic and mutants as bonus complications.

Buy Now
Author: RJ Scott
Regularly $5.99, Today $2.99
Small Town Romance

🍁 Sam Caldwell is fourth-generation maple farmer in New Hampshire, rooted in tradition, family, and quiet contentment—until he finds Ben Marshall half-frozen on the roadside, a sharp, guarded city boy running from his past without even a proper coat. RJ Scott crafts M/M romance that understands how rescue creates immediate intimacy but lasting love requires something deeper than circumstance. That initial encounter—Sam pulling Ben from danger—establishes their dynamic: one man deeply rooted, the other desperately adrift, and the pull between them that neither expected.

❄️ Ben lost everything in Boston—career, reputation, the life he built—and retreated to his great-aunt Harriet’s home in Caldwell Crossing as his last safe place. But safety doesn’t equal peace, and catching feelings for the grumpy, gentle farmer who rescued him is the last complication he needs. Scott excels at damaged characters who don’t believe they deserve good things finding someone who sees their worth anyway. The grumpy/sunshine dynamic works because Sam’s not cold—he’s careful, protecting a heart that’s already invested before his brain catches up.

🌲 As winter thaws and maple flows, trust and laughter grow between two men who’ve built walls around their hearts. But when Ben’s past threatens to drag him under, the question becomes whether they can create something together or whether fear will win. The maple farming backdrop isn’t just scenic; it’s thematic—you tap what’s there, patiently collect what flows, and transform it through fire into something sweet. That’s the relationship arc in metaphor: patience, transformation, and creating sweetness from what seems harsh.

Why this resonates: Scott writes LGBTQ+ romance with emotional authenticity and small-town warmth, where community matters and found family counts as much as blood. For readers who loved TJ Klune’s Under the Whispering Door or Alexis Hall’s Boyfriend Material, this delivers similar pleasures: men learning they’re worthy of love, small-town settings that feel lived-in rather than stereotyped, and the terrifying courage required to risk your heart when life’s already knocked you down.

… See the rest of today ‘s Book Picks here on page 3Page 3