

In my book, this qualifies as a second chance romance, but it’s not completely accurate. Close to twenty years later, work brings her back to her hometown and a second chance at broken relationships.

When Quinn moved to New York City from her hometown of Kingsford, she left everything and everyone behind: her depressed mother, her younger sister Kelly, her former best friend Sawyer who meant everything to her. Plus, the audiobook adds a whole new level of emotion.I’m not sure why but this was my first book by Monica McCallan. I first read this book in 2015, and it still lives in my head rent-free today. I dare you not to fall in love with Robyn and Caid. My all-time favourite lesfic novel, it’s romantic, sexy and chock-full of Hollywood dazzle. This classic, seminal lesbian romance can be summed up in four words: terrible cover, brilliant book. A steamy, dreamy romance, it’s funny, sexy, and kinda perfect.Īnd Playing The Role of Herself by KE Lane Will they end up together? I was totally invested and wanted it for this fictional couple more than I have for a very long time. An age-gap romance between Taylor Lopez and her former history teacher Raquel Alonso, the story builds, wraps itself around you, crushes you with love and leaves you breathless. Spoiler alert: you will fall in love with this story, because JJ Arias has a way with words that makes it impossible not to. A romance that ebbs, flows, and eventually soars? Tick, tickety tick! You feel every step of Quinn and Sawyer’s second shot at love, and I finished the book with a satisfied sigh. Set in a Stars Hollow-esque small town? Tick. Read it!īack In Your Arms is a delicious second-chance romance that ticks every box of my favourite genre. A second-chance romance, it’s got heart, soul, and everything in between. The Secret Of You And Me kept me gripped from first page to last, and I stayed up so late reading it, I was useless the next day. No, you’re not seeing things – Mills & Boon published a lesbian romance. The Secret Of You And Me by Melissa Lenhardt When Dahlia and London come together, I was giddy with excitement. But what stopped me in my tracks was the feels. Yes, there’s a solid story with competition, lust, and drama. Anita Kelly shows a skilled pair of hands in mixing this story: a pinch of rich/poor trope, a teaspoon of family strife, a sprinkle of non-binary, and a splash of coming out. Make it queer, and have two characters falling in love on-screen and off? I’m in. I watch cookery reality shows by the dozen, so this made me sit up. Ready for my mushy-smushy Valentine’s Day recommendations? Here goes… It’s true what they say – you always remember how a story makes you feel, and this lot left me deep in a barrel of lurve. This Valentine’s Day, I thought I’d recommend a bunch of sapphic books that made me all warm and fuzzy.
