There are a couple of new books out this week that I’m looking forward to reading. Yesterday I mentioned the new Holly Stars mystery, but today I’m taking an opportunity to mention that Ashley Herring Blake has a new book out by doing a reminder of my post about her previous series, Bright Falls. Bright Falls is a trio of small town romances featuring snappy dialogue and some of my favourite romance tropes – including fake relationships.
The new book is Get Over It, April Evans and it’s the second book in her new Clover Lake series, following up from last year’s Dream On, Ramona Riley. Clover Lake is a lakeside town in New Hampshire – the first book featured a movie filming in the town, and the second features a resort in the town and their summer staff. I still need to read Ramona Riley – I bought it at Saucy Books in the autumn – so maybe the arrival of April Evans is the kick that I need!
It’s the first Thursday of February, and I wanted to mention that there is a sequel out today to one of last February Quick Review books, Murder in the Dressing Room. The sequel is called Missing in Soho and has a missing photographer and an attack on a private detective. As I wrote in that review of the first book, there is was a big hanging plot thread left in that one, so I’m intending to read this one to find out what happens next. I will try and remember to report back! It also should be noted that that first book has had a bit of a cover redesign since last year so don’t be confused if you spot the paperback in the shops and it looks a bit different to the one from last year.
I’m not going to lie, this month’s Quick Reviews have been a tricky one to pick and write because as I mentioned on Sunday it was a bit of a strange month in reading what with all of the skating. I skipped a Book of the Week because of that, I read a few things that I’m going to use in other posts, and quite a few things that weren’t very good – or at least that I didn’t want to write about! But I’ve made it in the end even if it’s a slightly strange selection.
Managed Mayhem by Patti Benning
Lets start with something that I did like. As you know I’ve been working my way through a lot of Patti Benning mystery novellas, some of which have better premises than others – the motel one where people keep dying is a bit of an issue for me, because I definitely wouldn’t want to stay somewhere where a body a week is turning up, but the search and rescue dogs one at least has the excuse for why she keeps finding dead people. Anyway this is the first in a new series, once again set in Michigan where our heroine is Bridget who has been called in by her aunt to go and help with her novelty shop. The aunt is in Europe on holiday and things seem to be going wrong in her absence so she offers Bridget a free room in the apartment above her garage if she’ll go to Mill Creek and sort it out. Bridget has her own reasons for wanting to get away from her normal life but when she arrives in town she discovers a shop that doesn’t seem to have made any money in years, a missing store manager who then turns up dead in her aunt’s basement. The mystery is good enough but the potential for the series is better.
Not Another Love Song by Julie Soto
Gwen is a violinist, who has made it into the New York Pops Orchestra against the odds. Xander is the star of a classical crossover pop group who has inexplicably joined the Orchetra to play first cello. They don’t get on, but then Gwen is promoted to first chair – a job that Xander thought was going to be his and their rivalry kicks up a notch, right until it doesn’t. I read Julie Soto’s Forget Me Not a couple of years ago and althoug it was a BotW I thought it didn’t quite deliver on what it promised in the sample. But I liked the sample for this one (again) and went for it but this is another occasion where I missed a cue until too late because we’re back in the Reylo fic world. And I’m a bit over the tiny heroine and tall brooding misunderstood hero now because there have been so many (see also Love Hypothesis, and many others). This also suffers a bit from the fact that the heroine is a pushover, there is a comically evil villain and the whole Xander/Alex split started to drive me wild. But, judging by goodreads this has worked much better for people who are possibly less jaded than me!
A Deadly Affair by Agatha Christie
As you may have realised at this point, I’ve been working my way through the “new” Agatha Christie short story collections as they hit Kindle. We’ve had the seasonal collections and this on is themed around love and the depths that love can drive people too. There are all her big detectives included here but quite a few have been in other collections, so if you’ve done the other collections here, you may recognise some here like I did. On the bright side though, I’ve just started working my way through the David Suchet Poirot from the start as they have hit Netflix, and one of the early episodes I watched last week was based on one of the short stories in this that I read the week before!
We’re into February and for the third time in four Books of the Week so far in 2026, I’ve picked a new release. OK, so this came out the week before last not last week, but it was still a late January release and so I’m claiming my prize.
Anyway, The Future Saints is about Theo, a music executive and the latest band he’s been sent to try and rescue: The Future Saints. The three-piece band has been struggling (unsurprisingly) since the death of their manager and when Theo first sees them they’re bombing at a dive bar in their home town. But they owe their label one more album and Theo’s job is to try and get that done and complete their contract. Hannah, the group’s lead singer, has taken them in a new direction with tortured rock about grief and loss replacing their earlier California-pop-surfer sound. But when one of Hannah’s performances goes viral it looks like the band is on an upward trajectory even as Hannah appears to be spiraling out of control. Can Hannah – and her sister Ginny – survive the effects of fame and overcome the tragedy that the band has suffered? And can Theo help them through it and keep his career?
I read one of Ashley Winstead’s previous novels, The Boyfriend Candidate, nearly three years ago. That was a romance, but since then she’s written thrillers – until this. The Future Saints is comped with Daisy Jones and the Six in the blurb and although that’s not quite right (for me at least) it’s definitely different to both of those prior genres Winstead has written in. There isn’t a thriller plot here but there is a romance strand, but it’s not the main point to the plot – which is how does a band deal with a tragedy and how can you save someone who doesn’t want to be saved.
It’s also hard to explain all of what is going on here without giving a major element of the plot away, which the blurb and the early stages of the novel are very careful not to do, so I’ve respected that, but I also need to say that it was quite unexpected and kept me guessing about what was going on and how it was all going to work out for a long time. I also thought that the resolution of the novel was really well done in a way that I hadn’t thought possible at times. It has a few overblown or over drawn moments, mostly when it came to Theo, who for a smart person is remarkable dense at times when it comes to his career, but I enjoyed it and I think it would make a really good book club book.
My copy of The Future Saints came from NetGalley, but it’s out now in Kindle and Kobo – where it’s only £3.99 at time of writing, as well as in paperback. I haven’t spotted it in the shops yet, but I will keep looking
As I said yesterday, there’s a new Amazon valentines novella series and so there are a few of those on here. Otherwise I’ve nearly finished one of the long runners and so I’m getting there, despite a night out at the theatre in the week and a very busy weekend. Onwards into February.
Books bought: 4 actual books (3 of them in Sheffield), 1 pre-order placed, 5 ebooks
Most read author: Goodreads tells me that the Elissa Sussman is the longest book I’ve read this year so far so it must be that!
Books read in 2025: 31
Books on the Goodreads to-read shelf (I don’t have copies of all of these!): 597 (I told you I’d done a cull!)
January started well, but then sailed a little bit off course on account of that entire week of skating in Sheffield. Which was amazing and I regret nothing. The week of recovery I regret a little bit more, but hey these things happen. There are more novellas on this list than usual – because at times that was all my fried little brain could cope with, but also because Patti Benning writes annoyingly readable things and I kept going straight on to the next one but also because Amazon dropped another Valentines Novella collection with a bunch of romance authors I like and I ended up reading those instead of finishing off some of the things I had on the go. I’d like to think February will be a better month in reading, but the Winter Olympics start on Friday and we all know how much I love the Olympics. And given that I can only watch one thing at a time and I also have to work, the reading may get a little sidelined in favour of figure skating, skiing and sliding,
Bonus picture: Another picture from my fabulous week in Sheffield!
*often includes some short stories/novellas/comics/graphic novels – 10 this month!
Happy Saturday, I hope you’ve got something nice planned to mark the end of January, which often feels like the longest month of the year. To cheer myself up on a bleak cold afternoon this week, I dodged the rainshowersd to take a look at what’s in the bookshops at the moment now we’ve had the first 2026 releases start to drop.
This is Foyles Charing Cross Road, and the first thing to note her is that Heated Rivalry is right there. The series based on the books has had loads of buzz and now the novels are available here in paperback. They were also in the window at Waterstones just up the street on Tottenham Court Road, but Foyles is clearly ready for the demand because they had them on the shelves and piles of them in the over flow section at the back of the romance section.
Meet the Newmans is also all over the place. It was in both windows, it’s on this the front fiction table at Waterstones and it was on one of the front pillar displays at Foyles. I also spotted it in the Waterstones in Sheffield a couple of weeks ago, so it’s cearly got a big old release. The thing that interested me in Waterstones though was how many books on this table came out this week. These include Chosen Family, which is the next novel from the author of the very buzzy Green Dot, Wants and Needs and The Old Fire. The Ten Year Affair came out on the same day as Meet the Newmans, all of which is to just hammer home how busy January has been for new books after the desert that was December for physical releases.
Apart from Meet the Newmans, the other book whch is all over the place is Jennette McCurdy’s debut novel. You may remember her memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died, which was massive a couple of years ago. I read that back in 2024 and it needed all the content warnings and a resilient frame of mind to read, but it was really really powerful. Half His Age is her next project after that, and is about a seventeen year old high school student and her obssession with her creative writing teacher. From all the reviews that I have read it sounds just as unsettling as her memoir was, and I’m not sure I’m in the right headspace (am I ever?) for somethign that’s being described variously as shocking, uncomfortable and eerie, but I’m expecting it to do well.
Here are the Mysteries from Foyle’s front entrance: The Osman is obviously a pre-Christmas release as is the Adam Kay, but the new Marlow Murder Club book is here, as is the latest Tom Hindle. The Don Winslow is also a new release this week – it’s a collection of six short novels, all of which sound very Not For Verity which is also the case for the Darkrooms (another January release), Our Last Resort and What We Left Unsaid, just in different ways!
So lets end on an up note, back where we started with the piles of Heated Rivalry books, waiting for the fans to descend after watching the adaptation! Have a great weekend.
So after my little moment about Cowboys and Romantic Suspense yesterday, I thought it was the perfect time to remind you about my post about Rebekah Weatherspoon’s Cowboys of California series which I wrote nearly three years ago. As I noted in that, although Weatherspoon has other series which are very much romantic suspense* but these are much lower angst, rich people falling in love on a luxury ranch stories, which are also fairy tale retellings so subtle that I didn’t spot the fact that that’s what they were doing when I was reading them!
Side note: as we’re moving towards illustrated/cartoon covers for ranch/cowboy novels, I’m expecting these three to get a recover at some point in the near future, if the whole of the rest of the genre isn’t romantic suspense!
*some of which are a bit trauma bonding/inappropriate relationship with a co-worker-y
Happy Thursday everyone, and I have another new book out today that I wanted to talk about. So we have a big trend of Cowboy and ranch romances at the moment, but Night Rider is adding in the famous person and normal person trope in this case a a cowboy and a Hollywood starlet. But. But. Look at this cover: Pastel colours, illustrations. Yes there is the word suspense in the Bailey Hannah quote, but does this look like a romantic suspense novel? Because this is the final line of the description:
But that dream is threatened when Nina’s past catches up with her. And when an unlikely predator strikes, she and Maverick must make a choice: to let each other go or face the world together.
So. I have a copy of this via NetGalley because I am behind with the Cowboy/Ranch trend and I wanted to get in on it, but when I was picking it out, I didn’t really peg it as being as Romantic Suspense as the Amazon page says it is. So I’m going to read it, and see how romantic suspense it is, and then go and find some more cowboys to see if they’re all actually romantic suspense and cover signalling has gone even more out the window than I previously thought!
As you know, I’m not reading across the US in 2026 (and if you didn’t you can find my reasons here) but as the last act of my six year odyssey reading a book from every US state each year, here are a couple of the books from the tail end of the 2025 challenge that I have not yet written about for today’s recommendsday.
New Uses for Old Boyfriends by Beth Kendrick
Delaware is always a hard state to do, so after enjoying the first book in the Black Dog Bay series so much that it was a BotW last year, in the absence of anything else from Delaware I came back for book 2 this year. This is a fresh romance story, but linked to the previous one in that the characters from that pop up again. Our heroine this time is Lila who is back in the town she grew up in after her marriage imploded and career as shopping channel host came to a screeching halt. Back home she finds that her family’s money is gone and her mum is in denial about this. The only reason I didn’t like this as much as the first one is that I found Lila (and her mum even more so) a bit grating at the start, she’s such a princess and that’s really not my thing, but the character growth was so good that it was worth reading through my initial irritation! I am definitely going to be reading book three!
Savage Run by C J Box
This second book in the series sees Joe investigating after a massive explosion in his patch which the police say has killed a notorious environmental activist in a stunt gone wrong. But he’s soon discovering clues that seem to point to a conspiracy. These books are right on the edge of what I can deal with in terms of thrillers – the plots are amazing but they’re very violent and the only reason I can stick it out is because I know that it’s a long series so Joe has to make it to the end of the book alive!
Renewing Forever by Kelly Jensen*
This is a later in life second chance romance between two men who were childhood friends but whose relationship broke down just during the summer after high school. It also has as side order of trying to figure out what to do with an old resort in the Poconos for one half of the duo and a difficult relationship with a parent (and some associated money issues for the other). I enjoyed reading it once I got into it, but it was a bit of a case of why didn’t they just talk to each other at some point. I know that for Book Reasons they had to not do it, but 30 years is a lot of stubbornness!
And there you are. That’s the lot from this year, but here’s the equivalent post from last year as well.