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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Better late than never!
Guests / September 4, 2005

Well, it’s been forever since I posted about what I read. I know you’ve all been sitting on pins and needles just waiting for me! (If anyone including me believes that then I think we all have another think coming!) Before I get to the fun stuff let me take a moment to offer my prayers and thoughts to any and all who might have been affected by Hurricane Katrine. If anyone knows where I might donate some mens clothing I̵...

What are you reading?
Guests / August 29, 2005

well I haven’t posted my reads in a couple weeks, but they haven’t changed much since I’ve been so busy. LOL Two weeks ago I went home to PA for a week’s vacation and though I took several books with me, I barely got any reading in. In paper I’m reading Gabriel’s Ghost by Linnea Sinclair. I’ve been working on this for about 3 weeks. it’s a good book I’ve just been too busy for more t...

no more happily ever after = marriage?
Guests / August 24, 2005

Ah, the formula for a romance is gone. Did you know? Not get that memo? “Romance fiction has annual sales of $1.41-billion (U.S.) worldwide, according to Avon Books. Half of all paperbacks sold internationally are romance titles, and a third of all popular fiction sales are romance titles. There are 64.6 million readers of romance fiction in the United States; 22 per cent of them are men. “The endings of the stories have cha...

What I’m reading…
Guests / August 17, 2005

So, I have been so busy lately that I haven’t been reading a lot, but I have started The Bitch In the House: 26 Women Tell the Truth about Sex, Solitude, Work, Motherhood, and Marriage, edited by Cathi Hanauer. It has been an entertaining book for the short stories, but more so for the looks I got with a pair of snarling lips on the cover with the word Bitch in capital letters. Needless to say, it made for quite an entertaining tr...

Default Title
Guests / August 9, 2005

Just finished the ARC of GABRIEL’S GHOST (Bantam Spectra, October 2005) by Linnea Sinclair. It’s advertised as a fast-paced space adventure with elements of religion, technology, romance and adventure. And it was. You got your basic religious fanatic, a mixed bag of galactic species trying to overcome natural and taught prejudices to work together as a team, a rouge troop of adventurers out to effect a “good mission...

What I’ve been reading this week
Guests / August 8, 2005

Well in paper I finished Crimson City by Liz Maverick last night before bed. Next up in paper is an ARC of Gabriel’s Ghost by Linnea Sinclair. In electronic I started reading a WAY advance copy of Of Man and Monsters by Saje Williams. I’m about 6 or 7 chapters in to it so far and it’s been really good so far. I can’t even imagine what surprises Saje has coming yet. I guess after I finish that one I’ll start...

Ever Read the Award winners?
Guests / August 7, 2005

I guess this goes along with the movies too, but how does knowing a book took a prize affect your consideration of the book? I just posted the 2005 RWA RITA(tm) winners here and I found that only a few had been entered in the database at all — which means no one else requested them in the past year. Odd, don’t you think? And when I entered them, a good third are no longer in print (the category ones) with no plans to reissue...

a gripe about book covers
Guests / August 6, 2005

Yeah I know we all complain about them sometimes but I had to post about it since one if the books I just recently read that is sitting on the table in front of me, drove me nuts when I read the story. I don’t want to say what book as some of my comments on the cover may give away some spoilers about the story. Anyhow, in this book, a 30’s or so year old man is abducted mistakenly as the kidnappers wanted his brother. The ki...

I never posted last week’s reads. And here it’s almost time to post this week’s!
Guests / August 6, 2005

Well not quite as much reading over vacation as I had hoped, but I did get through several. In paper I finished Oceans of Fire by Christine Feehan while I was getting a pedicure though that was actually last Friday (the day I started vacation). I read The Charmed Sphere by Catherine Asaro (long book and probably a big reason I didn’t get as much reading in this week since that one took a while), the Charmed Destinies anthology by ...

Reading update
Guests / August 3, 2005

Well, I’m still searching for what happened to my summer. If anyone finds it please let me know. While I’ve been searching I’ve also been reading. I haven’t read as many books as this same time last year, but I’m pushing hard to get close. I finished Conspiracy in Death by Robb. I didn’t care for this one as much as I have some of the previous ones. For some reason I had trouble getting my brain to en...