Sappho's Shelf
Second Chances Bundle
Second Chances Bundle
Couldn't load pickup availability
In this bundle:
Count Your Lucky Stars by Alexandria Bellefleur
Dream On, Ramona Riley by Ashley Herring Blake
Here We Go Again by Alison Cochrun
Count Your Lucky Stars by Count Your Lucky Stars
This book is basically comfort-food sapphic romance: funny, flirty, emotional, and packed with second-chance yearning. It follows two former best friends and first loves who unexpectedly reconnect years later and are forced into close proximity when one needs a place to stay. The appeal comes from all the unresolved feelings simmering beneath the surface—shared history, heartbreak, attraction, and the terrifying possibility of trying again. If you love friends-to-lovers, forced proximity, and emotionally messy people slowly admitting they still want each other, this book absolutely delivers.
Dream On, Ramona Riley by Dream On, Ramona Riley
This is a small-town queer romance filled with nostalgia, second chances, and “what if I finally chased my dreams?” energy. Ramona gave up her Hollywood costume-design ambitions years ago to care for her family, but when a movie starts filming in her hometown, she reconnects with Dylan Monroe—a chaotic Hollywood star who also happens to be her first kiss. The story blends emotional vulnerability with swoony chemistry, exploring ambition, regret, identity, and the fear of wanting more from life. It’s the kind of romance that feels warm and hopeful while still digging into deeper emotional wounds.
Here We Go Again by Here We Go Again
This book takes childhood-friends-to-enemies-to-lovers and gives it a deeply emotional road-trip twist. Two former best friends who haven’t spoken in years are forced together to drive their dying former teacher across the country on one final trip, which means confronting old hurts, buried feelings, grief, and all the ways their lives didn’t turn out as planned. It’s funny and sharp one moment, then quietly devastating the next. What makes it memorable is how human it feels—the characters are messy, vulnerable, and trying to figure out how to forgive both each other and themselves.
Share
