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A LATTE LIKE LOVE

Sad and unsatisfying.

A barista falls in love with one of her regular customers, a mysterious and heavily scarred man.

Audrey Adams is a barista in a Brooklyn coffee shop. She can’t help but be attracted to Theo Sullivan, a painfully shy customer who doesn’t remove his KN95 mask, even to drink his coffee. One day Theo tries to help Audrey with an aggressive customer, but the woman retaliates by ripping the mask off his face, revealing a large, disfiguring facial scar. Theo flees the shop and doesn’t return, leaving only his sketchbook behind. A few weeks later, Audrey spies him on the street and encourages him to come back. The two begin dating and quickly fall in love. Audrey had moved to New York for college after being raised by a foster mother in Tampa, Florida. Now 24, she is just one semester shy of finishing her degree in electrical engineering at NYU. Theo grew up in New York. His parents divorced, and while his late father was a mechanic, his mother is a lawyer from a wealthy, powerful family. Theo never fit in with his mother’s clan, preferring to work in his father’s garage. He eventually pursued art and design instead of law school, making him even more of a black sheep. Even though there are interesting opportunities for friction and conflict in Audrey and Theo’s relationship—for example, class differences or their eight-year age gap—the novel’s only source of tension is Theo’s refusal to tell the story of his life-threatening accident. Harris makes several disjointed narrative decisions. The body of the novel is told exclusively from Audrey’s point of view, except for a 35-page flashback of Theo’s accident. Even more unusual is a 74-page epilogue that retells most of the major plot points from Theo’s perspective, which has the unfortunate effect of making this lonely, broken man seem sidelined in his own story.

Sad and unsatisfying.

Pub Date: March 17, 2026

ISBN: 9798217188673

Page Count: 512

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: Jan. 19, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2026

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JUST FRIENDS

A romance that could have used significant rethinking.

Childhood friends, almost-sweethearts, a misunderstanding, and a funeral.

Blair Lang and Declan Renshaw were best friends who went on one date before a disagreement and an accident sent them in different directions after high school. Now Blair is back from college to be with her great-aunt Lottie, who’s dying, and to support her single mother in small-town Seabrook, California. Finding a job at a coffee shop puts her in the path of her former boyfriend, since he turns out to be its owner. Can the two get past their mistakes? The novel uses the popular second-chance romance trope, but Pham fails to energize it through interesting characters. Blair’s grief over her great-aunt’s death and her plan to help her mother are overshadowed by internal monologues about her feelings, the way her friends aren’t paying attention to her, and the novel she plans to write. Declan’s distinguishing characteristic, besides being a former high school quarterback, is his skill at building birdhouses. Unsurprisingly, the couple doesn’t have much chemistry; when they embrace, their “bodies meld like…memory foam.” The wooden characters, unusual word choices (“conglomerate of pedestrians,” “litany of plants”), and odd turns of phrase (“tension melting from his eyebrows like butter melting in a warm pan”) are almost enough to obscure the lack of plot development. What passes for stakes is easily defused when Blair comes into an inheritance that saves her from working as a consultant at Ernst & Young in New York—so she can write a romance novel.

A romance that could have used significant rethinking.

Pub Date: March 3, 2026

ISBN: 9781668095188

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Atria

Review Posted Online: Feb. 16, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2026

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BLOODLUST

Two hot people confronting their trauma, making passionate love, and solving violent crimes! ’Nuff said.

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A heartbroken man lusts after his therapist while seeking revenge on a drug kingpin and his enforcer.

Mitch Haskell’s wife, Angela, died two years ago of an apparent suicide, but Mitch has always believed the scene was staged. Certainly, she would never have willingly left their young son, Andrew, behind. Consumed with a thirst for vengeance, Mitch—a former Marine and undercover agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration and currently a police detective—is struggling with alcohol dependency and uncontrolled rage. Andrew is living with his in-laws, who are making not-so-subtle suggestions that they might apply for permanent guardianship if Mitch can’t get it together. So his boss and best friend, John Bowie, mandates that he go into therapy, which puts him in the path of sexy Dr. Dylan Reede. Within a few days, Mitch makes a connection between two new murders and the death of his former partner; finds a big clue that points to the truth about Angela’s death; goes undercover as a homeless man; takes on a vicious drug cartel; and obnoxiously bullies Dylan with a charm offensive that leads them inevitably to bed. While Mitch seems to lean into the stereotype of the ex-soldier/cop with deeply buried trauma who believes that the ends justify the means—at least in law enforcement—Dylan offers the strength and sweetness to help him start breaking down his walls, allowing herself to be vulnerable in turn. Is passionate sex enough to ground a relationship and a family for the long term? For these characters, and the breakneck speed of this thriller, it’s as good a foundation as any.

Two hot people confronting their trauma, making passionate love, and solving violent crimes! ’Nuff said.

Pub Date: March 17, 2026

ISBN: 9781538743027

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

Review Posted Online: Dec. 11, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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