Thursday, January 22, 2026

Some Anticipated Reads of 2026

So many books, so little time—yet I can’t help get excited for some of the books arriving this year. Here are ten books I’m eagerly anticipating the release of, in no particular order:


A Brewed Awakening by Pepper Basham (contemporary rom-com)

Deadly Currents (Hidden Bay #3) by Elizabeth Goddard (contemporary romantic suspense)

Of Dawn and Embers (Fireborn #3) by Gillian Adams (YA epic fantasy)

The Restitching of Camille Dulaine (The Rivenlea Sphere #2) by Lindsay A. Frankling (YA fantasy)

Firebreak (Firebird Interlude #1) by Kathy Tyers (adult science fiction)

Crossbones (A Holly novel) by C.C. Warrens (adult suspense)

The Bachelor Spy (Freddie & Grace Mysteries #5) by Pepper Basham (adult historical mystery)

The Bird of Bedford Manor by Michelle Griep (adult historical romantic suspense)

A Lady’s Handbook to Gadgets & Guile by Angela Bell (adult whimsical historical romance)

Perplexity (The Sceptre & the Stylus #2) by Chawna Schroeder (YA fantasy)

What books are you looking forward to seeing this year? Leave a comment and let me know! Because you might just introduce me to my favorite book of the year.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Book Recommendation: The Unraveling of Emlyn Dulaine

 


The Unraveling of Emlyn Dulaine (The Rivenlea Sphere #1) by Lindsay A. Franklin

Genre: YA Portal Fantasy

The Story: A teen searches for her missing sister in a world she once though imaginary.

Content Notes: Moderate fantasy violence (no gore), light and clean romance subplot, extensive unexplained supernatural elements.

Why I loved this book: I loved the whole premise of magical libraries and the ability to jump into storybook worlds. This whimsical foundation was then coupled to a world that felt vibrant and fresh, offbeat characters, great dialogue, a strong narrator voice, a dizzying plot that kept me guessing, and some great humor. What is not to like?

Pair with 1 Corinthians 12-13.

Ponder what gifts God has given you and how to use that for others’ benefit.

Pray for affirmation for a current area of service or clarity for a new direction of service.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Tiny But Mighty Second John: Lesson 3 - The Truth & Beyond

Read: Second John 1:1-3

Focus: Second John 1:2-3

 

Knowledge (What does the text say?)

Answer the following questions from the text:

v. 2 Why does the Elder and those who know the truth love the readers?

Where is the truth found?

How long will the truth be with us?

v. 3 What else will be with us? (Three answers)

Where do these come from? (Two answers)

How is Jesus described?

Where is that triplet gift found?


Understanding & Wisdom (What does the text mean and how does it apply?)

In the previous lesson we looked at John’s first presentation of love in truth, which is such a dominant theme in this letter.

First, we recognized John’s love as agape love, the divine, unconditional love with which God first loved us. This is important because agape love is not based on any external circumstances, but pours forth out of its own fullness, regardless of the worthiness of its recipient. We, being finite and cracked vessels, have no such boundless flow. Therefore, God continually pours His love from His limitless spring into us, which then allows us to pour that out to Him and others.

But John did not merely love his readers. He loved them in truth. Truth, generically, refers to that awareness that sees beyond the surface to the unchanging reality and thus produces transparent and reliable integrity. So when John says he loves in truth, he is assuring his readers (among other things) that he is not only acting for their best interest, but he is doing so in a way that is clear-eyed, open, and trustworthy.

Then John informs his readers that he was not alone in his love. The readers are also loved by all who know the Truth. That is, those people who have a growing comprehension of the Truth by which all true things are measured, the truth of Christ and His word. This showed us that truth, and specifically God’s Truth, are the waters in which agape love flourishes and binds us together as Christians, whether we know each other or not. Remove agape love from the pool of God’s Truth, and it will die like a fish removed from water.

Because of the Truth

All this brings us to verse 2, which provides us further insight into the Truth which provokes agape love.

First, we learn that our motive to love is the Truth. Love does not merely flow from the Truth. Truth is the cause to love’s effect. Like a fire requires a spark to be ignited, as a waterwheel requires flowing water to turn it, or yeast requires warm water and sugar to grow, so agape love requires Truth. You can’t choose one over the other.

Moreover, God’s Truth is the reason we bother loving at all. For the possible reasons for loving one another are plentiful:

We can love others because of our relationship to them, because they are family or friends or coworkers or fellow Christians. We can love others on the basis of the benefits they bring, because they can help us or provide us something or make us feel a certain way. We can love others because of their abilities or position, because they are powerful or rich or talented or famous. We can love others because of their character, because they are kind or gracious or generous or compassionate. We can love them because of their needs, because they are poor or needy or sick or broken or lost or hurting.  

While some of these motives may be more selfless than others, at least on the surface, Second John makes it clear we have a motive that should rise above all that: We, who know the Truth, love because of that Truth.

Question to ponder: What is it about the Truth that should compel us to love?                

Next John provides us some additional insight into the Truth, of why Truth is such a powerful motivator.

First, the Truth abides in us. Abides is a common Greek word for staying where one is placed. This is then coupled with a tense that tells us the abiding is a continuous state. So the Truth has been placed in us and will continually stay there. There is stability in that statement. The Truth won’t be in us one day and gone the next. We won’t misplace it or accidentally lose the Truth. It can’t be stolen. For the Truth has been planted in us (James 1:21), and it will remain with us because we’ve been given the Spirit of Truth (John 16:33). Therefore, the motive and the means to love each other are always available, never fluctuating, never changing, ever dependable.

Second, the Truth will be with us forever. Not only is the Truth in us, where no one can touch it or steal it away, but John also declares it will be with us. That is, Truth will accompany us wherever we go, for all time. No matter what we encounter, what predicaments we find ourselves, what places we travel to, what situations we face, the Truth will be right there alongside us, guiding us, helping us, enabling us to love with God’s love. Not just today. Not just tomorrow. Not just next week, next month, or next year, but throughout the age into eternity.

These two realities tell me that once we know the Truth, we can’t un-know it. Memory may fail, the mind may grow dim. But we need not worry about losing the Truth. The Truth—and the Spirit of truth—abides in a place that cannot be touched by disease or dementia or Alzheimer’s. Its presence cannot be amputated or surgically removed. Therefore, this makes the Truth a treasure worth pursuing as well as a spiritual essential necessary to fulfilling the greatest commands to love.

Question to ponder: In view of this, what questions can we ask ourselves to see if we’re handling the Truth—both Scripture and the Person—rightly?

Grace-Mercy-Peace

Next, in verse three, John proceeds to give a slightly unusual salutation.

The first thing that sets apart his salutation is its form; it is a statement of fact. In most of the other epistles, you’ll read, “Grace and peace to you,” or “May the grace of God be with you.” These are expressions of wishes—the articulation of an author’s desire for his readers. But there is no wishing here in John’s words. He states his salutation as an established fact. Grace, mercy and peace will be ours. There is no question, there is no doubt. We can expect to receive grace, mercy, and peace from God, to have them with us, to accompany us on our way.

The second oddity isn’t obvious in most English translations. First, in the Greek, no and separates mercy from peace. It simply reads, “grace, mercy, peace will be.” Second, the verb will be is singular, even though it has three subjects. Three subjects should have a plural verb, not a singular one. This tells me that John sees grace, mercy, and peace, not as three separate things, but as one complete package: The grace-mercy-peace gift will be with us. Each one will be found with the other two.

This is emphasized when we realize that the order of these three words is also intentional. When appearing in salutations in the New Testament, they always appear in the same order. Grace always is listed before mercy or peace. Mercy always follows grace and proceeds peace. Peace always follows grace or mercy or both. This order shows that each part of this gift enables the one that follows it.

So we start with grace, God’s generous, no-strings-attached favor which He pours out on us. Without this favor, God would have no reason to show us mercy, which is His pity and kindness expressed in His noticing and meeting our needs out of His abundant resources. And only once God has met our needs due to His mercy can we experience the wholeness, harmony, and well-being of peace.

Now the reason we can know that these gifts belong to us is because they flow directly from the presence of the Father and from the presence of His Son, Jesus Christ. There is no post office to lose them. There is no distributor to misplace them. There is no deliverer to break them or steal them. We can know with complete certainty that these will be ours.

Finally, John circles back around to his theme of truth and love. He concludes the third verse by telling us this grace-mercy-peace gift comes in a special wrapping—it’s packaged inside of truth and love. As if to emphasize his point of verse one, John places truth first, in the place of greatest importance and dominance.

So we see these five things come in concentric circles. Truth is in the outermost ring. Love resides in truth. Grace, mercy, and peace are found in truth and love. Grace must precede mercy. Mercy must precede grace.


 What does all this mean for us?

First, truth is foundational. You remove truth, and everything crumples.

Second, these five things—truth, love, grace, mercy, and peace—are a gift. We don’t earn them. We don’t acquire them. We can’t buy them. They are a gift that God chooses of His own free will to bestow upon us, and apart from Him we have no way to gain them. And because God does choose to give them to us, they’re always available to us.

Third, God provides everything we need. He knows we can’t experience peace apart from His mercy. He knows we can’t receive His mercy until He gives us His grace. And He won’t show us the favor of grace unless He loves us, and agape love cannot exist apart from the Truth. So in Jesus, God gives us it all.

Question to ponder: In light of all this, how then should we live?    

Thursday, January 15, 2026

My Favorite Reads of 2025

In 2025 I read seventy-three books. So while I’m hardly a super-reader, obviously books remain something I love and regularly indulge in. 

This year I enjoyed a bumper crop of good stories. Most of them earned a four- or five-star rating for me. What does that mean?

For me, a four-star read is one I enjoyed and would be quick to recommend. The book is well-crafted and contains clean to edifying content. A five-star usually means a book clicked with me personally in some way or is truly extraordinary in craft and content.

This makes picking out my favorites from this past year unusually difficult, because I have so many I want to recommend. But that would make this newsletter unwieldy. So, doing my best to pare it down, here are seven of my top reads of 2025.


Favorite Picture Book

Because by Mo Willems, illustrated by Amber Ren

Genre: Contemporary

The Story: How a little girl becomes inspired to become a composer-conductor.

Content Notes: This is a secularly published book.

Why I loved this book: This was truly a right story and the right time. I needed very much the reminder that small actions are important and that our actions can have an unseen impact.

Honorable Mentions:

Do Great Things for God series (nonfiction biography)

Pippa and the Singing Tree by Kristyn Getty (rhyming)

 

Favorite Midgrade (8-12 years) Novel


Secrets in the Attic (Mysteries, Mischief & Marshmallows #2) by C.C. Warrens

Genre: Midgrade mystery

The Story: Two kids try to banish the “ghosts” from a neighbor’s attic.

Content Notes: Light violence (dealing with bullies) and questions raised (though addressed) about ghosts

Why I loved this book: This book has all the vibes of the old Boxcar Children series, which I adored as a kid. There’s a mystery without getting overly scary. There’s heart and humor and quirky characters. There are also some good discussions of hard topics (grief, friendship/marriage, ghosts) at age-appropriate levels.

Honorable Mentions:

Beneath the Swirling Sky (The Restorationists #1) by Carolyn Leiloglou (magical realism)

The Sapphire Sword (The Sapphire Saga #1) by Robert Fuller (science fiction)

The Tiny Cyborg (RoboTales #3) by Jill and Luke Williamson (science fiction)

 

Favorite Young Adult

The Unraveling of Emlyn Dulaine (The Rivenlea Sphere #1) by Lindsay A. Franklin

Genre: YA Portal Fantasy

The Story: A teen searches for her missing sister in a world she once though imaginary.

Content Notes: Moderate fantasy violence (no gore), light and clean romance subplot, extensive unexplained supernatural elements.

Why I loved this book: I loved the whole premise of magical libraries and the ability to jump into storybook worlds. This whimsical foundation was then coupled to a world that felt vibrant and fresh, offbeat characters, great dialogue, a strong narrator voice, a dizzying plot that kept me guessing, and some great humor. What is not to like?

Honorable Mentions:

The Chaos Grid (Book #1) by Lyndsey Lewellen (dystopia)

Echo Nova by Clint Hall (dystopia)

Squire of Truth (Blood of Kings: Legends #1) by Jill Williamson (Romantasy + Mystery)

Darkfell (Book #1) by Amanda Wright (Fantasy)

 

Nonfiction

The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt

Genre: Adult psychology (secular)

The Story: A look at the impact of digital childhood on kids.

Content Notes: This book is written by a non-Christian.

Why I loved this book: This was a fascinating and thought-provoking read. The author communicates in a clear, easy-to-understand language and with a level-headed sensibility about the growing documentation concerning the impact of social media and the digital realm on our everyday lives. He primarily focuses on children and young adults, but much of what he says equally applies, in varying degrees, to adults as well.

Honorable Mentions:

Waiting On the Word by Malcolm Guite (Advent devotional/poetry)

An Annie Johnson Flint Compendium by Annie Johnson Flint/Roland V. Bingham (poetry/biography)

George MΓΌller: The Guardian of Bristol’s Orphans by Janet & Geoff Benge (biography)

 

Favorite Adult Novels (Tie)

Tea With Elephants (Suitcase Sisters #1) by Robin Jones Gunn

Genre: Adult women’s fiction

The Story: Two women struggling with the crossroads in their lives take a trip of lifetime to Africa.

Content Notes: Emotionally poignant and potentially tough topics

Why I loved this book: The gentle pacing and thoughtful spiritual content of this story is a soothing balm to the soul. Plus the joy of travelling to and being immersed in another place/culture.


To Love a Beast (Once Upon a Time in Texas, Book 1) by Karen Witemeyer

Genre: Adult historical romance

The Story: A western retelling of Beauty and the Beast.

Content Notes: Sweet and clean romance, with some light violence (no gore)

Why I loved this book: Plain and simple, I’m a huge fan of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast. So, all the Easter eggs and head nods to that movie kept me smirking throughout the book. And while this may not be the most original retelling, it was presented in a way that I found comforting rather than annoying, probably because there are enough unique aspects to make the story enjoyably its own, between the delightful characters, a sweet romance, and a beautifully integrated spiritual thread.

Honorable Mentions:

Protector (Susa Chronicles #1) by Megan Schaulis (dystopia)

26 Below (Alaskan Cyber Hunters #1) by Kimberley Woodhouse (suspense)

Injustice for All by C.C. Warrens (suspense)

 

Favorite Christmas Novella

Christmas on the Goblin Express by J.J. Fischer

Genre: Christmas magical realism novella

The Story: A burned-out medical student boards a magic train to escape Christmas

Content Notes: Sweet & clean romantic subplot, light fantasy violence, high supernatural (due to non-human characters or magical objects).

Why I loved this book: This story felt completely Christmas-y, hitting all the right feels, without feeling like a Hallmark rom-com or a knock-off of another famous Christmas story, like It’s a Wonderful Life or A Christmas Carol. This book was its own unique story filled with great humor and sprinkled with poignant moments that added a beautiful emotional depth with weighing it down. Add in quirky but complex characters, some action-packed adventure, and a large dose of whimsy, and the result was Christmas-perfect.

Honorable Mentions:

Christmas at Sugar Plum Manor by Roseanna M. White (historical romance)

Holly Jolly Christmas by C.C. Warrens (contemporary/suspense)

 

What were some of your favorite reads of 2025 and why?

 

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Book Recommendation: The Anxious Generation

The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness by Jonathan Haidt

Genre: Adult psychology (secular)

The Story: A look at the impact of digital childhood on kids.

Content Notes: This book is written by a non-Christian.

Why I loved this book: This was a fascinating and thought-provoking read. The author communicates in a clear, easy-to-understand language and with a level-headed sensibility about the growing documentation concerning the impact of social media and the digital realm on our everyday lives. He primarily focuses on children and young adults, but much of what he says equally applies, in varying degrees, to adults as well.

Pair with Romans 12.

Ponder how the digital world, and especially social media, is affecting your life, positively and negatively.

Pray for wisdom to use technology well.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Tiny But Mighty Second John: Lesson 2 - Love In Truth

Read: Second John 1:1-3

Focus: Second John 1:1


Knowledge (What does the text say?)

Answer the following questions from the text:

Who is this letter from?

Who is the letter to?

How does the elder love the recipients?

Who also loves them?

 

Understanding & Wisdom (What does the text mean and how does it apply?)

This week we dive into the first part of Second John, the greeting. Since this is basically John saying “hello” to the reader, it might be easy to think we can just cruise through these first three verses. After all, how much can we really learn from someone saying, “Hi, it’s me; I hope you’re doing well”?

But the thing of the short books is that there is no wasted space. To write short means to write precise and make the most of every single word. So though these first three verses might be “only” the greeting of this letter, John is already setting the foundation for what he will be talking about in the core of this letter.

An Affirmation of Love

So after identifying himself and his recipient, John first affirms his love for the recipients of this letter.

This love is the agape love (sometimes called unconditional love) which we frequently associate with God elsewhere in the New Testament. And contrary to how it is sometimes described, agape love is not a love devoid of warmth, affection, or emotions. It may in fact be the warmest of all love because it is the love which pours forth from its fullness and is therefore in no way dependent on the worthiness of the object. Such love can only be known through the actions it prompts and must then go beyond the realm of emotion into the realm of will and deed.

Such love is beyond us, of course. Left to ourselves, we would never be able to love in this way. We simply lack the fullness required for it. Our love is insufficient, no matter how much we might strive to love this way.

Thankfully, though God commands us to love one another, He doesn’t ask us to love one another with our love. As John notes in his first letter (1 John 4:19), God loved us first, and therefore we now have the capacity for such love; our love can—must—draw from the fullness of God’s love in order to love Him and others rightly.

So John declares his God-rooted love for the recipient, and because he does, they can know that whatever John writes will flow from a desire for their highest good. If John speaks praise, they can know it is not flattery or an attempt to earn favor, but that it is genuine affirmation and encouragement. If John speaks criticism, they will know it comes from an earnest wish to help them avoid danger, not from an attitude of superiority or from trying to make self look good.

Thus John first affirms his love for them.

Truth-Rooted Love

Second, John establishes that his love is rooted in truth. “In” is a general preposition denoting the sphere within which something is found. So John’s love could be literally said to be confined or restrained by truth.

Truth comes from a Greek root that means “to escape notice, to forget,” which then has the prefix added on that means “the opposite of.” (Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary, pg. 645) This leads to the meanings of “nonconcealment,” “hiding nothing,” and then “what is seen, indicated, expressed, or disclosed.” (Bauer’s Lexicon, pg. 42; Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Abridged, pg. 37). Thus, truth is “the reality lying at the basis of an appearance; the manifested, veritable essence of a matter.” (Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary, pg. 645) The corresponding Hebrew word adds the dimension of “a reality that is firm, solid, binding, and hence true.” (Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, Abridged, pg. 37-39).

Therefore, truth is more than a sticking to the facts. It is an awareness that sees beyond the surface, a revealing of an unchanging reality, a reliable integrity that doesn’t hide. 

So when John says he loves in truth, he is announcing that his love is founded on an unchanging reality, so that the love itself will never change. John is assuring his readers that his love will operate with openness, integrity, and transparency. It will not conceal, hide or deceive.

Moreover, because John loves in truth, his love is not blind, but quite the opposite. It is aware, seeing past pretense and appearances to what really is. And because this truth-love sees, it eradicates the fear of what will happen if someone should find out “the truth,” because the truth is already known, yet the love remains.

Questions to ponder: What is “love in truth” not? What are some of the traits of “love in truth”?

Now this is all interesting because, John describes himself as “the Elder.” This likely indicates he is well advanced in age, older than his recipient, a position in that culture that demanded high respect. This description as “the Elder” also likely meant John held a special place in authority and position, probably due to being one of the original twelve disciples of Jesus. So John could have easily pulled rank and insisted that the lady and her children heed his instructions due to that position. Instead he reminds them that his love rooted in truth.

Question to ponder: What can we learn from John’s example in this?

Knowing the Truth

Now John does more than affirm his love for the chosen lady and her children. He also adds that they are also loved by “all who know the truth.”

First, knowing here is not a reference to head knowledge. It isn’t being familiar with the order of the books of the Bible. It isn’t the ability to list the facts. It isn’t the recitation of a creed or doctrine. Rather, this knowledge is comprehension and understanding.

Moreover, this knowledge isn’t passive, something we learn and shelve. It isn’t something gained by osmosis. Rather, this knowledge is active. It indicates a growing understanding and a pursuit of the thing that we desire to know.

Finally, this isn’t regurgitated or borrowed knowledge. That kind of knowledge is second-hand, with no real connection between the person spouting the information and the information itself. Rather, the knowing here indicates a relationship between the knower and the thing known, because the knower values or considers important the thing known. So there is a treasuring here.

Which brings us to what is known: The Truth.

Now sometimes we think of truth as something cold, hard, harsh, even divisive and angry. John’s words reveal that God’s Truth ought to have the opposite effect on His people: it is because of their knowledge of the truth that these other believers love the lady and her children.

So we see that truth should spark love. For it is God’s Truth that makes us aware of His love so that we can love others. It is God’s Truth that binds us together, despite our differences and diversity. It is God’s Truth that stirs our love for other believers, even those we don’t know and have never met.

Which emphasizes again that agape love is not blind nor does it love indiscriminately. Indeed, it has little resemblance to our culture’s version of tolerance, which is sometimes rewrapped by churches as love. Rather, agape love that binds us together is the love derived from the Truth.

This means that agape love flourishes in the presence of God’s Truth. The more we truly understand and embrace the Truth, the deeper our love should grow.

This also means, conversely, no Truth equals no agape love. An organization, a church, a family, any group of believers may claim to love, but if they lack God’s Truth, their love will be superficial at best and destructive at worst. Hardly the agape love we are told to show, and indeed, a lack of this love may be symptomatic of a loss of truth. For while God’s Truth might exist apart from love (see the church at Ephesus in Revelation 2:1-7), agape love cannot exist apart from Truth any more than a fish can live apart from water. 

So a solid foundation of God’s Truth is essential to agape love within the church and among individual believers, and it is what allows us to love others as commanded.

Question to ponder: How do we learn to love in the truth?



Thursday, January 8, 2026

New Fiction Releases: January 2026


More in-depth descriptions of these books can be found on the ACFW Fiction Finder website

Action/Adventure:

Fire Between Two Skies
by R.F. Whong -- Two eras. One relentless quest for truth amid desires and temptation. Across the centuries, two men are bound by parallel destinies that echo through time. Book 3 of this dual-time odyssey delves deep into the passions and struggles that connect their worlds. (Action/Adventure, Independently Published)

 
Amish (Contemporary and Romance):

Plain Jane’s Secret Admirer
by Anne Blackburne -- Jane must overcome her disappointment upon discovering that the man she's loved since childhood is the same person who gave her a hated nickname in their school days; can she and Sam overcome her distrust and his guilt and shyness and find their way to a shared future? (Amish Romance from Barbour Publishing)
 
An Amish Second Chance
by Beth Wiseman -- Can Hope and Rueben share the secrets that they've held close to their hearts and have the second chance they long for? (Amish Contemporary, Independently Published)

 
Children’s Middle Grade /Chapter:

The Case of the Four-Legged Friend
by Becca Wierwille -- In this Christian mystery for kids, a girl must find a dog's home before he's sent to the animal shelter. (Children’s/Middle Grade, Independently Published)

 
General Historical:

What Loyalty Demands
by Carol Ashby -- When rebellion breaks out in Roman Britain, the protective British cousin of a Christian woman and the Roman tribune who wants a future with her discover how enmity born of conflicting loyalties can be overcome when believers serve as the peacemakers Jesus commanded them to be. (General Historical from Cerrillo Press)

Historical Romance:

Far Grander Than Paradise
by Barbara Blythe -- She needs to find her father. He needs to atone for his dead brother’s sins. Can they find what they seek on a voyage that takes them halfway around the world? (Historical Romance from Elk Lake Publishing)

Whispers in the Valley by Amanda Cabot -- A woman whose life is in shambles. A man who's fighting for his future. A decades-old mystery. Carr Valley will never be the same. (Historical Romance, Independently Published)

Love Under Construction by Linda Shenton Matchett -- Nadine Krause took in boarders to help her family climb out of debt after her father’s death. Business has gone well, and she’s earned enough to expand the house. When her brother’s friend agrees to take the job - the only man in town willing to work for a woman - sparks fly. But not the good kind. Or are they? (Historical Romance from Shortwave Press)

 
Romantic Suspense:

Hidden Talent
by Bettie Boswell -- When author Leah Beach is threated because of a new rescue mule she's modeled one of her comic characters after, she seeks help from a reluctant body guard, Carlton Marsh, who soon discovers the threat is real. (Romantic Suspense from Mt. Zion Ridge Press)

Fighting for You by Robin Patchen -- She's running from her past. He's protecting his future. Together, they must fight for what matters most. (Romantic Suspense, Independently Published)

Trapped on the Alaskan Glacier by Megan Short -- Forced into hiding after witnessing a double murder by an organized-crime gang, Beth Ryder’s identity is suddenly leaked online and a kill order is placed on her head. Her survival is now in the hands of US Marshal Jake Cruz, who is determined to keep her alive. But when it becomes clear that more than one group is targeting Beth, the stakes are higher than ever. (Romantic Suspense from Love Inspired [Harlequin])

Deadly Secrets by Penny Zeller -- Betrayal has consequences... Harper Amerson loves her job as a real estate agent. That is, until it becomes clear that someone is watching her. What happens when she attempts to sell the land someone doesn't want sold? (Romantic Suspense from Maplebrook Publishing)

 
Speculative Fiction:

Cerulean Rose
by Demi Griffin -- A mysterious, in-depth re-telling of Cinderella. (Speculative/Romantic Fantasy, Independently Published)

Braving Fiery Waters by Sarah Hanks -- Her husband died in a fire. Now she’s heading straight into one. Marina Stone planned an ideal family vacation, perfect for reconnecting with her two teenagers after their father's death. But those plans go drastically away when she time sails to the White Cloud in the year 1849. Now she must face her greatest fears and complete a mystery mission before she can return to her life and children. (Speculative/Time Travel, Independently Published)