Yippee Ki-yay romance lovers. It’s the best time of year for romance with that winter chill keeping us all cozy inside (storms included). Cozying up with romance is the way to survive the winter and I wouldn’t have it be any different. This next crop of romance recommendations was absolutely meant to be shared around the holidays but with work getting busy my writing slowed down a ton. Fitting since now I can count this as my first quarter romance picks ahead of the Valentine’s Day holiday.! This was an excellent quarter of romance reads as I read everything from ghosts to sports romance. Tis the season as it were. Yet I stayed true to my roots with second chance romance and yearning—which I will never abandon. Lot’s of sophomore novels and debuts leading out the beginning of the year. Sink in and enjoy!
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Sunk in Love by Heather McBreen

Second chance romance while on vacation in Hawaii: hot. Being stuck on a cruise ship with your entire family: not. Two spouses veering towards divorce must pretend they’re still in love on a final family vacation—rather than let their family in on the truth and ruin their last trip together. Roslyn and Liam are a sworn pair. Together so long one could not think of one without the other. When a tragedy occurs, they face a reality where they aren’t or rather cannot be what each other needs. After months of avoidance and silence lead to a three month separation and encroaching divorce, they face telling Roslyn’s family. Both would rather push through the upcoming vacation than reveal the truth. But vacationing away from their lives is more difficult than they thought as Roslyn and Liam must question not is the love still there, but is it ever really over. Sunk in Love, Heather McBreen’s sophomore novel is an achingly heartfelt second chance romance set alongside a scenic Hawaiian cruise. I make it no secret that second chance romance is my favorite romance trope. The possibilities are limitless and the angst even more so. Sunk in Love is another one to add to a growing list of flawless second chance stories. Tracking a present and past narrative between Liam and Roslyn as love is discovered, lost, and regained, McBreen charts the ups and downs of a family vacation and a love story all in one. McBreen understands the inherent hotness of the British accent, someone making you lasagna from scratch (on a first date no less), and a man who reads romance novels (I know). This is a gorgeous gorgeous second chance love story for the cautious hopeless romantics, yearners, and lovers of stoic men. Sunk in Love is proof you can have it all.
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Sparks Fly by Zakiya N. Jamal
Tired of waiting around for life to find her, twenty-seven year old journalist Stella Renee Johnson decides to seize it with two hands—literally. An invite to NYC’s hottest club and an unshakable determination, Stella quickly comes face to face with a handsome stranger and just as quickly flees their steamy assignation. At work the next day the last person she expects to see is the stranger from the party. That handsome stranger is Max Williams, the brother to their CEO—a CEO who is currently ramping up a partnership integrating AI into their writing. With the chemistry already sparked, Stella and Max can’t seem to pull themselves away from each other even as professional ties suggest they should. Even more, they may not want to. A romance for the late bloomers and the bisexuals. That’s what Zakiya N. Jamal brings to the scene with her perfectly modern love story, Sparks Fly. Sizzling chemistry initiates a romance between unlikely duo, Stella and Max as they navigate workplace and personal conflict alongside their blossoming relationship. This is a romance that starts out with the heat on high and dials it back as our leads face whether or not their chemistry can outlast the everyday. Like your boss forcing you to use Generative AI in your writing process putting your career on the line. Despite the various ups and downs, Stella and Max never make you doubt their incredible connection. It’s there, they just have to fight for it. Jamal builds up a flawless romance while interrogating artificial intelligence in the workplace, fraught friendships, and complicated familial dynamics. Sparks Fly is a whip smart contemporary romance that not only made me feel the sparks but the power in building your future step by step.
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Heart Check by Emily Charlotte

Luke Dawson and Harper Braedon have always been at odds. He’s the town’s hockey darling and she is decidedly not, making a name for herself in handcrafted jewelry and hating on the beloved sport. But the two are stuck working together in the local diner after school, sharing classes, and navigating the ins and outs of their small town. Ahead of an opportunity for a young entrepreneurs grant, their school’s hockey coach is fired for embezzlement and Dawson is partially responsible for starting a rumor that Harper spilled the beans. Now the grant is a no go, and Harper and Dawson are forced into the close proximity they have spent years avoiding—to build something better or be stuck forever on opposing sides. Venture into Hamilton Lakes in Emily Charlotte’s delightful young adult romance Heart Check, a small town coming of age story involving the misperceptions of the heart and all of the quirks in leaving animosity behind for uncertain ground. It has been awhile since I have been so utterly charmed by a story such as this one and lord was I charmed!! Heart Check reeled me in with the hate to love premise and left me feeling empowered and entirely heart-warmed by its end. This novel hits the perfect shot with hilarity (see Dawson having Troy Bolton level anxiety crashouts and Harper losing it over a crush because he signaled before turning (a green flag)) and deep emotion. Exactly what you’d expect of the turbulent high school years. Heart Check is absolutely a romance, but it’s also about two opposites breaking down social barriers to reach mutual understanding—challenging predisposed beliefs and building to something better. Readers won’t just find comfort in the small town wintery-scape of Hamilton Lakes or the romance Charlotte has crafted, but the strength embedded in this community.
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The Wild Card by Stephanie Archer
The entire Vancouver Storm team and one feral alley cat: Jordan you need to be with Tate. Jordan Hathaway’s safe space is the Filthy Flamingo, the bar she manages in Vancouver and home away from home for the local hockey team. Behind the bar she can avoid her past failures and the fraught relationship with her father, the owner of the Vancouver Storms team. Breaking that peace is Tate Ward, Vancouver Storm’s coach stuck checking in on Jordan every now and again despite the fact that they cannot stand one another. When her father announces his plans to sell the team Jordan is thrust into the orbit of hockey, her second love and the thing her father chose over family time and time again. A defining choice: to take over the team or let it extinguish right as it is on the brink of making history—something Tate is not willing to let Jordan decide alone. The Wild Card is a hockey romance to end all hockey romances. Seamlessly a hard hitting look at the lives we lead for others and the power that comes from opening ourselves up to authentic connection, it’s a romance fueled by misunderstanding, coffee runs, clothing mishaps, and forgiveness. I’m always going to crave a true hate to love story where we get to crack open the interiority of our characters and pour over the details. Wild Card doesn’t rush headlong into the romance, instead opting to establish our two leads and the issues they have to surmount—earning every single one of its almost five hundred pages. Tate and Jordan are two feral cats at a standoff (which is why it’s even funnier they get roped into coparenting a stray cat together). The Wild Card expertly contrasts the bitterness and grief packaged into a chaotic five foot tall bartender, and a stoic controlled hockey coach trying to hold it all together. Sharp, steamy, and brimming with delicious tension, The Wild Card is not just the best Vancouver Storm novel, it belongs in the hockey romance hall of fame.
Preorder a Copy — Out 3rd February

For Our Next Song by Jessica James

What’s next for your rock band is nothing compared to unresolved feelings for your bandmate. Keyboardist Jane and drummer Keeley have always had a perfect harmony on stage. Off it they are desperate to hide their feelings by a tried and true staple: avoidance. When a chance for collaboration forces both women into close proximity, decades of feeling and attraction come pouring out in the music and the space between them. A forever kind of connection may be in the cards, that is if they can navigate a much larger test through the media and their respective families. Jessica James returns to her acclaimed recently reunited punk pop group the Glitter Bats in For Our Next Song, a sapphic friends to lovers romance all about composing music and the importance in living our authentic truth. A reunited rock group on the brink of a major resurgence is merely the beginning of this romance and much like their comeback it’s only better from there. For Our Next Song is the rock filled sapphic romance we deserve, striking the perfect chord between angsty and romantic like all the best sort of love songs. This her second in the Glitter Bats series, Jessica James strives to connect the history of a band both past and present, a slow burn sapphic romance, breaking away from religious trauma, and the fragility of the media, all of which are executed to perfection. James doesn’t just make you feel for her main characters; she makes you fall in love with the landscape surrounding them—be they writers, fans, industry names, or fellow bandmates. It made me wish I could really kick back to the Glitter Bats and throw support behind these two women (or force them to confront feelings from within the band). Jane and Keeley need that push and the result is electric and heartfelt, a love story well worth cheering on from the crowd or behind the stage.
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The Odds of You by Kate Dramis
Writer Sage Collins already did the hard thing and bet on herself, quitting her day job after the success of her dystopian series debut. But the hard thing is actually writing its direct sequel, of which Sage has written practically nothing. On a flight to Comic Con Sage is tested further with an overly curious passenger, Theo, who could have been created in a lab just to irritate her. Theo is also a rising star, but instead of books he has made a name for himself in film. After their strange encounter is captured on camera at the airport, rumors spark of a romance between them and squashing them leaves Sage even more on edge—especially considering she and Theo do have a connection. Sparks are one thing but Sage can’t afford to give into her heart, not when she’s still trying to prove that she is worth it, to herself and to everyone else. Kate Dramis’ contemporary romance debut is a stunner, no other way of looking at it. Seamlessly welding the magic of the love story with an unflinching view on perfectionism, familial expectations, and a homage to Nancy Meyers’ The Holiday, The Odds of You is romance novel perfection (entirely the good kind). This novel was written with the perfectionists in mind, or anyone working through the often Sisyphean nature of personal standards. Dramis is here to affirm just how we still deserve epic and loud love stories—not in spite, but because of who we are. The Odds of You has a great kernel of conflict: can we even reach for the love we know is there if we can’t see ourselves as worth anything? The journey out of that is a poignant one. Grounded in expansive locales, sweeping romance, and a breadth of emotion that left me floored, you won’t find a book more representative of the beauty of the romance genre and the power in the modern love story than this one.
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The Ex-Perimento by Maria J. Morillo

How to Lose a Guy in Ten Days, but it’s trying to win back the man who left you after four years together, all with the help of your favorite indie singer. A breakup gone viral, a firing, and a list to fix it all begins this gorgeous contemporary romance debut from author Maria J. Morillo. Bringing readers to Caracas, Venezuela—the people, cityscapes and serene nature— all while exploring the downfall of living our lives solely for other people, The Ex-Perimento is a romance meant to be lived in. Just like our protagonist Marianto, stuck for so long living life for others, this novel forces the reader to experience the journey of finding oneself when we aren’t trying to be what others expect of us. The Ex-Perimento is a story for the people pleasers who twist themselves into whatever everyone else wants them to be, and the reality of untangling ourselves to uncover exactly who we are. Wrapped up in a quest for discovering how to win back an ex while falling for your wingman, The Ex-Perimento feels classic rom com with a deeper pulse of community and want. Morillo understands the atmosphere of the romance, where the city is almost its own character and the characters struggle against suffocating expectations, finding freedom in the attempt to live their lives differently and the romance which evolves parallel to that. Marianto casting off the desires of others to forge a new path of her own making is an altogether freeing journey, as is her romance with Simón who provides her the space to grow and decide what it is she wants. Tied with a sparkling romance that leans into the slow burn and strong Venezuelan roots, The Ex-Perimento is one debut to live vicariously in and savor endlessly.
Preorder a Copy –Out 17th Feb
Our Exes Wedding by Taleen Voskuni
What if we found out not only that we share the same ex but were stuck planning her wedding together. Ani Avakian has two problems: credit card debt from a failed wedding and unresolved feelings for the woman who broke her heart. When she gets the chance to plan the wedding of a lifetime for an indie movie star, Ani joins forces with Raffi Garabedian, notorious playboy and owner of the Armenian winery where the wedding is to be hosted. Her initial annoyance with Raffi is greatly surpassed by the revelation that the indie star’s wife to be is Kami, her ex girlfriend. Pulling off the career making wedding is now more important than ever, but it means putting faith in a man she does not like—someone whose heart was also broken by Kami. Taleen Voskuni unveils her third romance, Our Exes Wedding, rich in backstory, Armenian culture, and wedding planning antics. Two perspectives, Ani: the wedding planner and Raffi: the winery owner face past heartbreak as they attempt to pull off the wedding of the year all while fighting for their respective futures. Taleen Voskuni has a knack for intriguing protagonists and this novel is abundant with the character quirks while evolving a truly fabulous romance. Like the feminist book club Raffi stumbled into entirely by accident that helped him better himself, the whisper network, and the queer entanglements. Our Exes Wedding has the kind of setup that makes for not only an incredible romance but deep character study. Characters Raffi and Ani are simply delightful with a magnetic push and pull that kept my heart racing every time they interacted on page. Ani and Raffi love big and fall hard and with all the internal work their love story feels so earned by the time they get their clients to the altar. Our Exes Wedding is big on the details and unconventional in its setup but it all shapes up a wonderful Armenian romance with a queer twist!
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Get Over It, April Evans by Ashley Herring Blake

Falling for your exes’ ex while rooming together and teaching a summer art course?? The kind of mess I live for. April Evan’s world is falling apart. Her tattoo business has failed and to make ends meet she’s subletting her house while she’s away for the summer teaching an art course at a nearby resort. But all of these woes are nothing compared to her fiance’s infidelity three years past, when she unceremoniously dumped April for a younger woman. When April arrives at Cloverfield, she’s surprised to learn she’ll be rooming with another member of staff for the duration of the summer—and who should that person be but Daphne Love, the woman her fiance left her for. But Daphne has no idea who April is. Her relationship with Elena is over and done, and the rocky relationship she faces with April in its wake only reveals a forbidden attraction and a chance for them to reach for all the things they’ve been yearning for. Ashley Herring Blake loves mess in her romances and I am just along for the ride. Her latest romance series, Clover Lake, is shaping up to be messy, queer goodness and this latest addition is the imperfect romance we all deserve. Two artists reaching for something bigger, connected by romantic entanglements of the past, serving a bit of “and they were roommates” on a summer art intensive is just the surface of this scintillating romance novel. Since book one I’ve been half starved for April’s story. Our resident tattoo artist lingering upon the past needed her moment and that moment is finally here. Get Over It, April Evans is in large part about the events that shape our lives, and the moment we set them down to rediscover our desires and who we are outside of them. April and Daphne are each on their own distinct journeys, but somehow Ashley Herring Blake is able to draw them together in an incandescent portrait of forgiveness, queer discovery, and an unforgettable New England summer.
Preorder a Copy – Out 3rd February
Daddy Issues by Kate Goldbeck
Twenty-six and going nowhere, art history graduate Sam Pulaski has been living at home with her mother since the pandemic. Stuck in a relentless cycle of job hunt purgatory, cynicism, and shame, Sam has accepted her lot in life—at least until she can get accepted into a PhD program and open doors to a job relevant to her field of study. But change cares little for her future plans as her moms upcoming wedding threatens to throw her living situation up in flames. Through all this, Sam makes a connection with her new next door neighbor, Nick, a divorced father, Trekkie, and manager of the local Chilli’s. Their relationship is impossible, a future even more so, but it’s the very thing that has Sam finally reaching for an imperfect future despite her reservations. Kate Goldbeck’s return to the contemporary romance scene is nothing short of iconic. Daddy Issues is an earnest portrait of the mid twenties, perfectionism, and what happens when those who fear failure fail hard. It’s also the perfect novel for anyone feeling lost and aimless in the years following a life altering global pandemic. Mark me down as I’m in this picture and I don’t like it. Daddy Issues portrays this struggle to move forward with such nuance and no loss of humor from Goldbeck, suffusing a comedic core to her sophomore romance. Our heroine Sam is a romance protagonist for modern times, navigating a post pandemic world and the reality that the future she was raised to believe was hers is no longer possible. This loss is a huge part of the narrative, a chasm Sam attempts to cross to a future that feels so far out of reach. Though struggle-ridden and watching a trainwreck-esque, Daddy Issues is fiercely romantic, capital H hot, and endlessly heartfelt. Through all of it Goldbeck has two calls to action: it’s never too late to reach for what you want and moving forward is far better than remaining listless in place.
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Seeing Other People by Emily Wibberley &Austin Siegemund-Broka

Morgan has a ghostly annoyance in the form of the man she went out with once and he is ruining her life. She would do anything to get rid of him, even venture to a mysterious support group for the haunted. Sawyer has a much different problem: he will do anything to keep his ghost around, even live in a half finished house that has slowly morphed into a haunted one. A chance encounter at the aforementioned support group leaves the two with a plan: Morgan will help Sawyer keep his ghost provided he helps her ditch hers. Excising their respective ghosts is one thing, but uprooting the past will require them admitting the real unfinished business: a chance to love again. Ghosts aren’t the only thing haunting this house in the latest from romance duo Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka. A story about the ghosts we bring with us into our relationships, both the literal and the baggage in tow, Seeing Other People is the kind of love story that both haunts and touches upon the uniquely human aspect of loving: the capacity to grieve. It’s a double edged sword here in this romance where the ghosts are not even haunting the narrative, they’ve got both hands on the wheel. Haunted by a ghost with an appreciation for Carly Rae Jepsen is a blessing not a curse (many would say), but for Morgan Lane her ghost is connected intricately to everything she’s been running from. Sawyer’s is the heartbreaking wave of letting go to move forward after taking the back seat in his own life story. Seeing Other People isn’t just concerned with the possibility of actual ghosts, but in the beautiful moments that spiral out from the connections we make with others—ever expanding in an overwhelming tapestry of compassion and second love.
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The Bodyguard Affair by Amy Lea
What happens when you work in a public facing government role and your after hours spent moonlighting as a secret romance novelist comes to light? Lie your way into fake dating the prime minister’s personal bodyguard to turn off the heat (this will have the exact opposite effect actually). The Bodyguard Affair is another sensational romance from author Amy Lea that acts as a window into the complexities surrounding forgiveness, family caregiving, and the vulnerability in sharing yourself with the world through story. And that’s all while serving up a truly fabulous workplace fauxmance. Big on the emotions with that slice of Ontario living and tropetastic feel, this book is a love story entirely of its own caliber. Shelve it all the way up to: a book too good to be real. This is the kind of love story that belongs to both its characters—splitting perspectives between personal assistant/secret romance writer Andi Zeigler and bodyguard Nolan Crosby. Where Nolan is wrestling with his childhood parental abandonment as he cares for his aging mother diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, Andi is stuck behind the wheel of her current career and life path as she chases her true passion: writing romance. Both have their own problems and the solution comes out of the most unconventional means—fake dating your colleague to help them out of a jam (said jam being rumors of an affair with your boss because you wrote a spicy workplace romance in your current field). Amy Lea knows how to bridge immense turmoil to the forefront of her narratives without losing the core of the romance novel. That is The Bodyguard Affair in a nutshell, intimately connected to the work involved in building a partnership out of everyday chaos and the exacting art of loving someone else. It’s wild, it’s messy, but the work of loving will always be worth it—one of the most deliberate acts we can ever undertake.
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