Review: Loon Point by Carrie Classon

Loon Point promises a quiet, character-driven reading experience shaped by setting and relationships. With themes of found family and a strong sense of place, it’s a book that seems more interested in comfort and clarity than flash.

Review: Just Add Happiness by Julie Hatcher

After years of being invisible, a forty-six-year-old baker blows up her old life and discovers that second chances can be as messy, sweet, and surprising as the perfect dessert.

Review: Before I Forget by Tory Henwood Hoen

A sharp, moving look at memory, identity, and the people who remind us who we are when everything else starts to fade.

Review: 59 Minutes by Holly Seddon

Tick, tick, tick. When the world’s about to end, everyone says they’d do something meaningful — until they actually have to prove it.

Review: The Merge by Grace Walker

A mother and daughter, one fading, one desperate, one choice to share a single mind.

Review: If I Never Met You by Mhairi McFarlane

When your long-term boyfriend dumps you and the office playboy becomes your fake boyfriend, HR really should offer hazard pay.

Review: The Girl Who Came Home by Hazel Gaynor

A quiet, beautifully rendered story of survival, memory, and the ties that bind generations long after the Titanic sank.

Review: Charlie Quinn Lets Go

A fiercely funny and unexpectedly tender story of a woman learning to release old baggage and chase the life she almost let slip away.

Review: Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman

Girls are magical, full of superstition and shimmering possibility, and Practical Magic captures that spellbound feeling in every page.