First-Time Caller by B.K. Borison


Surprise, surprise! I love it. This is the romcom I needed, and it kept a smile on my face through the pages until the end. The premise is quite cliché, but I still adore the chemistry between the characters.

The story revolves around Aiden Valentine, a radio DJ for "Heartstrings," Baltimore's romance hotline and the most popular late-night radio show. However, the ratings have been struggling, and he hasn't been able to engage a decent audience for months. Aiden is supposed to be giving love advice, but his short temper and jaded feelings about love have impacted the show. He’s fallen out of love with romance after being burned by too many lackluster calls. Clearly, something needs to change.

When Aiden receives a call from Maya Stone, who is discussing her mother Lucie's dull love life, having never seriously dated anyone, he sees an opportunity to help both of them as well as his show. Maya is hoping for some relationship advice, and their interview goes viral, which turns out to be a good thing for the radio station.

The show plans for Lucie to join Aiden on Heartstrings to seek out her happy ending. Although talking live on air might not be what she wants, she's willing to step out of her comfort zone to find the love she needs. Despite the hopeless candidates for her dates, Aiden can’t seem to get Lucie out of his head, pondering the realities of dating and the magic of love. There, I spoiled the review! 😂

Yes, it's a bit of a trope fest, but it's done so well. The character-driven plot kept me hooked, and even though it’s 400 pages, I flew through it. Fast-paced, sweet, hilarious, and heartwarming. I’m officially obsessed.

The Daughter by T. M. Logan


Evie Wingfield seemed like an average, bright, driven teenager, ambitious, curious, and focused on getting into law school. The university promised her the freedom she craved until she vanished. When her mother, Lauren, arrives to pick her up at the end of term, she's met with a chilling revelation: Evie quit the course months ago and never said a word.

With growing unease, Lauren and her son Lucas set out to uncover the truth. What starts as a mother’s desperate search spirals into a maze of secrets, lies, and buried truths that neither Lauren nor Evie is ready to face. Told through dual perspectives, the story starts off slow, drawing readers into the emotional depth of a fractured family before plunging headlong into a web of suspense halfway through.

As the mystery unravels, it becomes clear: the clues left behind aren’t just dangerous, but they’re explosive. And some truths may be better left buried. While the plot’s progression is straightforward and the character choices predictable, the power lies in the quiet, haunting way the consequences unfold. A subtle thriller that smolders before it burns.

This Immaculate Body by Emma Van Straaten


When Alice moved to a new place, wrestling with loneliness and the weight of starting over, she made an unexpected choice—she became a cleaner as a part-timer. Her family was horrified. She insisted it was temporary. But this wasn’t just about cleaning.

Once a week, she scrubbed Tom’s flat—a man she’d never met, yet somehow knew intimately. Through the clutter of his life, she pieced together his habits, his dreams, his favorite drink and place. And then... she fell for him. Not in the usual way. Alice’s infatuation was one-sided, all-consuming, and fueled by imagination. A cleaner by trade, but a voyeur by heart, she took her "job" very seriously.

To impress him, she even volunteered at a nursing home, hoping he’d see her as kind and noble. But beneath that façade, something was clearly off. Alice is painfully lonely, socially awkward, and emotionally fragile. Her world is small, but her delusions are vast—and hilariously detailed. I pity her family and cringed for her coworkers. But you can't stop reading.

After a year of fantasies, she finally decides to meet him. Then—bam!—Tom leaves her a 1-star review. The horror! Her perfectly constructed dream shatters. The planning for their "future" overwhelms her, and that’s when things really spiral.

This story had me hooked from the start. It’s funny, dark, and weirdly more or less relatable to today's viral story. Alice’s delulu is wild—and I loved every second of it. I wish it had more of her backstory. It would’ve made her descent into obsession even more powerful. Still, if you're into flawed characters and dangerously funny daydreams, this one’s for you.

The Strange Case of Jane O by Karen Thompson Walker


If I ever write a book, it would be something like this—part exploration of the human mind, part quiet mystery, and wholly unforgettable. It weaves threads of psychology, mental health, and the haunting unreliability of memory, all through a narrative that pulses with subtle suspense and emotional depth.

Told in alternating chapters—clinical reports and personal musings—the story follows Dr. Henry Byrd, a calm and measured psychiatrist, and his growing fascination with a private, enigmatic woman named Jane O. She claims they met twenty years ago under strange circumstances, but her story fractures from the beginning.

Jane was found unconscious in a park: unharmed, but lost in time, her memory blacked out for over 25 hours. There are no clear signs of trauma. No evidence of foul play. And yet, something isn’t right. Dr. Byrd suspects a connection between her brief, earlier visit to his office and this bizarre fugue state. But her crystal-clear autobiographical memory and occasional hallucinations suggest something deeper, more elusive.

After the blackout, Jane begins to write letters to her son in a notebook—a tender and heartbreaking attempt to explain the inexplicable. It’s a gesture meant for a future version of him, perhaps when he, too, begins to question the complexities of the mind and memory.

Then, two weeks later, she vanishes again—this time with her son—only to be found nine days later. For Dr. Byrd, this second disappearance becomes a turning point. A dissociative fugue, and also a doorway. A mirror. A chance to unravel not only Jane’s story but perhaps something buried within himself.

Jane’s memory is both her gift and her curse. And the most astonishing part is the intricate tapestry of pain and perception, which is known only to Jane and Dr. Byrd. 5 ⭐. An achingly beautiful, slow-burn mystery of the mind and heart. It moved me deeply

The Interdimensional Detective by Ten


Ava Brook's brother, River, vanishes just before an important interview, and with the local authorities dragging their feet, Ava makes a desperate call to a number she found on a bizarre ad — The Interdimensional Detective Bureau. What follows is a wild, heartfelt plunge into the unknown.

Amelia — a strange woman who casually steps out of what appears to be a dingy mobile toilet — turns out to be an interdimensional detective. Her "toilet" is actually a spaceship.

The rawness of Ava’s grief, the bittersweet hope in Amelia’s suggestion, and the reckless urgency of their search through alternate dimensions give this novella a pulse that's both sweet and thrilling. The world-building is vibrant without bogging down the pace, and the emotional stakes feel sharp and real.

For a novella, it’s wonderfully compact. Just enough to leave you wanting more, but not so much that it loses the electric feeling of a desperate rescue mission. If there had been more backstory, it might have stretched into a full novel — but honestly, the tightness of it works beautifully.

A strange, moving adventure. I loved it.