Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss

Welcome to Jen’s Jewels, where I spotlight the books you won’t want to miss. Today, I’m featuring LOVE ON THE SHELF by Sheila Roberts, a delightful rom-com featuring a bookseller, a radio host, and plenty of witty banter. If you love enemies-to-lovers romances with heart and humor, this one’s for you. LIGHTNING ROUND • What’s your favorite way to spend a slow summer afternoon? Sitting on the deck, enjoying a homemade blended drink wit...

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A mother-daughter road trip story filled with music, reinvention, family secrets, unforgettable summers, and the kind of nostalgia that lingers long after the last page, LOST IN THE SUMMER OF ’69 is the perfect companion for beach days, porch swings, and late-night reading sessions with a classic rock playlist humming in the background. Every great road trip needs a soundtrack, and this story is no exception. From the rebellious spiri...

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Each Friday the Smashwords store reports the bestselling indie fiction titles based on the previous week’s sales. If an author has more than one title eligible for the list, only the highest performing title will be included. This ensures high-performing titles receive the accolades they deserve, while providing up-and-coming authors the visibility they have earned. Don’t miss Monday’s Top 10 Hot Preorders List, where Smashwords will provid...

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What is the title of your latest release? TWENTY SOMETHING ELSE What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? A forty-year-old wife and mom wakes up from a freak pickleball accident with the chance to relive her twenties – single this time, out of order, and on her own terms. How did you decide where your book was going to take place? I love setting books in Southern California, where I live, but I also wanted Sutton to travel the wo...

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What is the title of your latest release? TENTACLES & TRIATHLONS What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? In this spicy sweet monster romance, a grumpy park ranger trains for a triathlon with the help of a sunshiney kraken – who happens to be his fated mate. How did you decide where your book was going to take place? I wanted to create a picturesque small town where monsters and humans live together in a way that feels norma...

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What is the title of your latest release? THE REIMAGINING OF THORNWOOD HOUSE What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? When land witch Evie Sharpe and her adopted daughter Ruby move to Iskendra to be caretakers of Thornwood house, they discover a grumpy, grieving, damaged structure that won’t let them in. They’ll need all their love and magic to re-imagine Thornwood house into the home they’ve always longed for. How did you decid...

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What is the title of your latest release? BRIGHTER THAN BEFORE What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? Part self-discovery journey, part sweet romance, Brighter than Before is a heartwarming reminder that it’s never too late to rewrite your story, chase a dream, and find joy in your life once you finally start choosing yourself. Think You’ve Got Mail meets a spectacular mid-life glow up. How did you decide where your book was...

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What is the title of your latest release?FEAST, and it is my debut novel. What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?On the backstreets of late 19th century London, spirited Minha is born with a remarkable gift – an extraordinary sense of taste. But this gift and her mixed-race heritage provoke mistrust and rejection, even within her own family. She escapes to France, but rather than finding the sanctuary she craves, she is forced to c...

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What is the title of your latest release?THE STARGAZER OF NANTUCKET What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book?THE STARGAZER OF NANTUCKET is an epic coming-of-age tale and a seafaring adventure. Set in 1851, the book takes you on a clipper ship journey with Winifred Starbuck, a stowaway from Nantucket, who joins her captain father and merchant mother on a once-in-a-lifetime trip around Cape Horn, to San Francisco at the height of the Gol...

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From MIRIAM IN THE SHADOWS by John Winn Miller, published by June 2026 by Bancroft Press. Reprinted by permission: Ten minutes. That was all the time Miriam had to make it from the office to inside her first target, the gallery with the trapped liquid oxygen canisters marked A-Stoff. It was dark inside, so she clicked on her flashlight and strolled in, inspecting the ceiling and walls as she had done dozens of times throughout the mine. She shive...

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Susan Grant | Ever Yearn to be Swept Away?
Romance / September 21, 2007

I’m often asked how an airline pilot/ex-USAF jet jockey ended up writing romance. “Easy,” I say. “Too little time on the ground coupled with way too much time to think!” Trust me, nothing aids plot-hatching and character-developing like fifteen straight hours stuck in the cockpit with lukewarm coffee and a sky so black you can see every star in the Milky Way. I do six to eight Pacific crossings in a month. On any given day, yo...

Linwood Barclay | Five Days and Counting
Uncategorized / September 20, 2007

My new book No Time For Goodbye comes out in North America in less than a week, and while this is my fifth novel, in many ways it feels as though it’s my first. My four previous works of fiction have been about an obsessive-compulsive, well-meaning, but generally pain-in-the-ass character named Zack Walker. He made his first appearance in 2004 in Bad Move, which was followed by Bad Guys, Lone Wolf, and Stone Rain. While I consider...

Jerrilyn Farmer | Advice from "Mad Bean" for a Killer Event!
Uncategorized / September 19, 2007

A great party, like a great mystery, needs to provide a few surprises and even a twist. I have given a good deal of thought to both parties and mysteries because I write about Hollywood event planner/caterer Madeline Bean, and it is her job (when not dodging murderers) to make sure every party guest has a good time. Pulling off a remarkable party isn’t a snap, but it helps to start off with the fun concept. Think vices! Do your fr...

T. Lynn Ocean | Reliving My Tomboy Days
Uncategorized / September 18, 2007

It all began when I was five or six years old and saw a boy peeing on a tree. I remember being outrageously jealous. Not because he had something down there that I didn’t, but rather because he could pee standing up and I couldn’t. I know this for a fact because I tried, and trust me, it wasn’t easy having to explain to my mother why my shorts and socks were wet when I went in from the neighborhood playground. I never ...

Robyn Carr | Want to Live in Virgin River?
Romance / September 17, 2007

A lot of readers have written to ask if Virgin River is based on an actual town, because they’d like to move there. Unpack those boxes – the town lives only in my mind, although I have heard from people who claim to live or have lived in such a place. They don’t usually say where. It might be all in my head, but I’ve been living there for a long time. I’m committed to delivering four more Virgin River novels. I’m not sure th...

Vicki Lewis Thompson | How I killed off the "Reading With Ripa Book Club"
Romance / September 14, 2007

It’s not my fault. I swear, I wasn’t the one who killed Kelly Ripa’s book club. Sure, I know it looks suspicious. In 2002 she was rockin’ along with her anti-Oprah picks, six of them, and didn’t we love it? Books with happy endings were getting on a TV talk show! Carly Phillips made it! Romance writers had a shot! More important – it was all about me – I had a shot. I figured Nerd in Shining Armor might make the grade with...

Jaci Burton | Genre Jumping
Romance / September 13, 2007

One of the questions I get asked most is whether it’s difficult to write in different genres. The answer is absolutely not. I love genre jumping. In fact, I think it would make me insane if I were to write in only one genre. Perhaps that’s because I’ve been writing in multiple genres since I started writing. It’s impossible for me to stick to one…flavor. I love so many. When I first started writing for Ello...

Elizabeth Hoyt | Ten Clues That You Are Watching a Really Bad Movie
Romance / September 12, 2007

So, the other day after my computer blew up, I decided that I needed a break from reality and I stuck a DVD in the player, sat back, and prepared to enjoy a whole lot of bare nekkid male chests. But a strange feeling came over me as I watched the previews to the movie. A feeling that I may have chosen A Really Bad Movie. Herewith is a list of my Ten Clues that perhaps I was not the target audience for the movie 300: 1. The pre-movie adv...

Colleen Gleason | Research & the Paranormal Historical
Romance / September 11, 2007

I’ve been asked many times about whether I research before writing my historical novels, or as I go. The short answer is: I research as I go. But that’s partly because I’ve been writing, reading, and watching historical fiction for a long time. So, I already have at least a sense of the era. I know the basics about what the people wear, how they travel about, what conveniences they have and don’t have, etc., so when ...

Diane Whiteside | Citizen Soldier
Romance / September 10, 2007

What do those two words mean, anyway? Strong, stalwart, dependable, intelligent, good in a fight. Oh, and definitely an alpha male – at least to a romance author! In fact, it sounds like an good list of things I’d want to find in a hero, doesn’t it? But when politicians talk about citizen-soldiers, they’re usually speaking about citizens who are about to leave their day jobs and go off to serve their country, probably to fight. ...