There’s nothing like curling up with a good Christmas book and a warm drink to get you in the festive spirit! These 21 new Christmas books for 2023 are perfect for your holiday season reading list and they also make great gifts if you would like to spread the holiday cheer!
You Might Also Enjoy Reading:
25 Bookish Gifts for the Reader on Your Holiday List
21 Festive New Christmas Books (2024)
15 Festive New Christmas Books to Get You in the Holiday Spirit (2022)
This post may contain affiliate links. If you click an affiliate link and make a purchase then we receive a small commission at no additional cost to you.
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. As an Amazon affiliate I earn from qualifying purchases.
1. Three Holidays and a Wedding by Uzma Jalaluddin and Marissa Stapley
Setting: Small town near Ottawa, Canada
Maryam Aziz and Anna Gibson are both flying from Denver to Toronto for the 2000 holiday season – Maryam with her family for her sister’s impromptu wedding and Anna to meet her boyfriend’s wealthy family for the first time. A massive snowstorm forces an emergency landing in a picture-perfect small town near Ottawa and Anna, Maryam and the bridal party (including Maryam’s childhood crush) are snowbound at the Snow Falls Inn along with the Hollywood cast and crew in town filming a holiday movie.
A heartwarming holiday rom-com collaboration between Canadian authors Uzma Jalaluddin and Marissa Stapley set in a diverse version of the typical charming Hallmark town! This book has two sweet romances and relatable main characters who experience some self-growth, a wise grandfather, lots of holiday season vibes, and additional themes relating to loss, second chances, self-doubt, and familial and cultural expectations.
I loved that the story took place in a rare year when the celebrations of Christmas, Hanukkah and Eid coincide and that the three holidays and traditions were incorporated into the plot in a meaningful way. Three Holidays and a Wedding is cozy holiday read that is filled with all the warmth of the holiday season!
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Random House Canada for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
2. The Wake-Up Call by Beth O’Leary
Setting: England (New Forest district)
Izzy and Lucas are receptionists at the Forest Manor Hotel in the New Forest area of England who have become bitter rivals following an incident at the previous year’s employee Christmas party.
The hotel is in financial trouble – business has not yet rebounded fully from the pandemic closure and the hotel is literally falling apart. Most of the rooms have to be closed while restoration work takes place at what should be the busiest time of the year and it seems increasingly likely that the hotel will have to close after the holiday season meaning that both Izzy and Lucas will be unemployed.
While cleaning out the hotel’s lost and found room, Izzy finds five wedding rings and is determined to reunite them with their owners. When a sizeable reward is received following the return of the first ring, hotel’s management becomes convinced that they might be able to save the hotel by finding the owners of the other rings. Izzy and Lucas race to try and find the owners and save their beloved hotel (as well as their jobs) and their feelings for each other become complicated as they spend more time together.
The Wake-Up Call is Beth O’Leary’s first romance set during the holiday season and it’s more lighthearted than her previous books. It’s an enemies to lovers romance (plus a frustrating miscommunication trope) set during the holiday season at a hotel in southern England. A cozy, festive read and I loved the setting – I spent some time googling about visiting the area because I love the idea of staying at a hotel with as much character as the Forest Manor!
3. It Happened One Christmas by Chantel Guertin
Setting: Chelsea, Québec, Canada
Zoey Andrews, an LA-based producer for a company that makes holiday rom-coms, travels to Chelsea, Québec on a last-minute trip a few days before Christmas hoping to find the locations she needs for a Christmas movie. The movie is scheduled to start filming in January but her assistant mistakenly booked locations in the Chelsea neighbourhood of New York City and Zoey has only a few days to fix things or the movie which she also wrote the script for will be delayed by a year.
Zoey is thrilled to discover that the small town lives up to her memories from a childhood visit and her mission is going very well until the frustrating and very attractive tree farmer/mayor of Chelsea, Benoît (aka Ben) Deschamps, refuses to grant her the permit that she needs for filming in the town. Zoey is doing everything she can to salvage her production when a series of mishaps and an unexpected ice storm strands her with Ben in the middle of nowhere and they have no choice but to rely on each other to survive the conditions and get back to Chelsea safely for Christmas Eve.
I thought this holiday romance was a delight – mostly due to the charming, small town Québec setting and the inclusion of Québec Christmas traditions. It’s an enemies/lovers insta-love romance and it’s a bit unrealistic but I expect that in a Christmas romance – you just gotta believe in the magic of the holidays. It Happened One Christmas is the perfect holiday read – a romance with Hallmark Christmas movie vibes that Zoey would swoon over!
4. A December to Remember by Jenny Bayliss
Setting: A small village in southeast England
A December to Remember is the story of three estranged half sisters who are reunited after the death of their eccentric father. Maggie, Simone and Star are three wildly different women in their late 30s/early 40s who have rarely seen each other since the idyllic childhood summers that they spent with their father, Augustus, in his small English village.
After their father’s death, the three women are called for the reading of his will which sets out a quest that they have to complete in order to inherit his estate – reinstating the traditional winter solstice celebration to the village of Rowan Thorp. The only way the three women can claim their inheritance is by working together over a period of several weeks to bring the town together for the winter solstice.
Like Jenny Bayliss’ previous books, this is a cozy, heartwarming story that is perfect for holiday season reading. There’s a bit of romance for each of the three women but the focus is on sisterly love and the healing of the relationship between these three sisters. There’s a festive atmosphere to the story but it’s centred on the winter solstice celebration which takes place a few days prior to Christmas and I loved learning more about the tradition of celebrating the solstice.
5. Midnight at the Christmas Bookshop by Jenny Colgan
Setting: Edinburgh, Scotland
In this sequel to The Christmas Bookshop, Carmen continues to work at Mr. McCredie’s bookshop on Edinburgh’s Victoria Street while living with her sister’s family although Sofia is hinting that she would like Carmen to find her own place to make room for a new nanny. The filming of a Christmas movie at the bookshop helped the bottom line a bit but the future of the shop is still in jeopardy.
Meanwhile Carmen and Oke had parted ways after a disagreement and he subsequently accepted a work assignment in Brazil so she is ignoring her non-existent love life to focus on revamping the bookshop in an effort to keep it afloat without resorting to selling cheap souvenirs to tourists.
Midnight at the Christmas Bookshop picks up where the first book left off assuming that the reader knows the characters and the backstory so it doesn’t work well as a standalone. It’s a lighthearted, feel-good holiday read that lacks a bit of the charm of The Christmas Bookshop but the descriptions of beautiful Edinburgh bring the historic city to life making it impossible to read without dreaming about visiting during the holiday season!
6. Christmas by Candlelight by Karen Swan
Setting: Yorkshire, England
Libby Pugh is a successful young lawyer in London who reluctantly agrees to stop in at a reunion of university friends after attending a wedding in North Yorkshire with her new boyfriend a few days prior to Christmas. The get together is being hosted by their friend, Archie Templeton, who has recently inherited the family estate from his father and all 7 of her former flatmates will be there – a group that Libby has been avoiding since they graduated from Durham University 9 years earlier.
Despite her initial misgivings, the evening is a great success until an unexpected snow storm followed by a power outage cuts the group off from the outside world and snows them in at the estate for the holidays. Over the next few days, secrets will come to light and Libby will have no choice but to face the truth that she has been trying to hide from for the past 9 years.
I love Karen Swan books and this was a page turner for me although not at all what I expected! The cover might lead you to believe that this is a fluffy holiday romance which it most definitely isn’t (although there are, in fact, two romances). Swan’s novels always combine a great setting with romance and some mystery but there is considerably more emphasis on the suspense in this novel!
The novel’s chapters alternate between present day in Yorkshire and the group’s final year at university gradually revealing to the reader what happened at Durham and what the implications are for the present day situation. A bit of a spoiler but this includes a sexual assault that happened while the group were at university that is key to the plot and could use a content warning as it’s quite the unexpected turn in what appears to be a holiday romance.
The story takes place during the few days prior to Christmas in Yorkshire but isn’t particularly festive apart from the heavy snowfall, an afternoon spent sledding and opening gifts on Christmas morning. If you’re looking for a festive romance that’s heavy on the Christmas vibes then this probably isn’t the right book for you but it is another captivating read from Karen Swan!
7. Bright Lights, Big Christmas by Mary Kay Andrews
Setting: Greenwich Village, New York City
A sweet holiday story filled with Christmas spirit!
Shortly after Thanksgiving, Kerry Tolliver travels with her brother, Murphy, and his dog, Queenie, from North Carolina to New York City where they live in an old camper van in Greenwich Village while selling their family’s Christmas trees during the holiday season. As the weeks go by, Kerry becomes close to many of the neighbourhood residents particularly a gruff elderly artist and a single father with an adorable son and starts to feel a sense of belonging that she hasn’t felt in a long time.
Mary Kay Andrews consistently delivers her trademark feel-good Christmas book filled with the magic of the season – a sweet romance, a heartwarming story of family, friends and community, a message about being brave enough to follow dreams and take chances, and a festive New York City neighbourhood.
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
8. Love, Holly by Emily Stone
Setting: England and a bit in Venice, Italy
Three years ago a car accident right before Christmas tore Holly’s family apart and she has spent the holidays alone ever since. Instead of seeing family, she takes part in a holiday letter writing campaign called Dear Stranger where she rights a letter to someone else spending Christmas alone and receives one in return.
This year she receives a grief-filled letter from an elderly woman named Emma estranged from her grandson, Jack, which mentions a cafe that Holly recognizes. Although the letters are meant to be anonymous, Holly is determined to find Emma and help her reunite with her grandson but once she tracks down Jack, Holly realizes that she met him once before and she is as attracted to him now as she was then.
Emily Stone excels at writing tearjerker holiday romances – Love, Holly is the third in a row that requires tissues at hand! This is a touching, beautifully-written story about people dealing with loss/grief and is uplifting despite the sadness due to its message of hope, healing and forgiveness – plus there’s a sweet romance. This book starts and ends at Christmas but it takes place over a year – it’s an enjoyable read and the Christmas chapters are great but it isn’t the most Christmassy feeling holiday read.
9. The Book Club Hotel by Sarah Morgan
Setting: Country Inn in rural Vermont
A feel-good holiday story about four women and a special hotel in a small town in Vermont.
Hattie, a 28 year-old widow who is exhausted from running the charming Maple Sugar Inn and caring for her 5 year-old daughter, is just trying to make it through the busy festive season. Erica, Anna, and Claudia, three women who are all around the age of 40 and have been friends since college, arrive at the inn for their annual book club holiday and while all three seem to have perfect lives each is dealing with career and personal issues. Over the course of a week long vacation the lives of the four women become entwined and each makes important changes to find the happiness she deserves.
A cozy and heartwarming story of family, female friendship, romance and the magic of the holiday season – with a happy ending for everyone! The winter wonderland of rural Vermont just sounds like the perfect holiday season destination and who doesn’t love the idea of a bookish getaway to spend a week with good friends talking about books?!? The Book Club Hotel is a great story to curl up with when you want to get in the holiday spirit!
10. Murder Most Royal by S.J. Bennett
Setting: Norfolk, England
The latest installment in a cozy mystery series that features Queen Elizabeth II as an amateur sleuth (Her Majesty the Queen Investigates). I previously read the first in the series (The Windsor Knot) but haven’t read the second (All the Queen’s Men). This would be fine to read as a standalone, however, the first three books do take place chronologically in the spring, summer and winter of 2016.
Murder Most Royal takes place during the 2016-17 festive season at the Queen’s Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, England where the Royal Family spends Christmas. The Queen and Prince Phillip, both feeling under the weather, arrive at the estate accompanied by the Queen’s Assistant Private Secretary, Rozie Oshodi, and are looking forward to spending the holiday with their children and grandchildren. The Queen has a lot on her mind what with Theresa May now serving as Prime Minister, Brexit and a controversial new president in the United States.
Shortly after arriving, the shocking discovery of a severed hand in a plastic bag on a nearby beach is brought to the Queen’s attention. She is able to identify the appendage based on a signet ring she knows belongs to an aristocrat that grew up nearby and often visited Sandringham to play with Charles. With Rozie’s help, the Queen involves herself in the investigation behind-the-scenes and solves the case before her holidays at Sandringham end in early February.
This is a charming series if you enjoy cozy mysteries and reading about the Royal Family. The author does an excellent job of breathing character into each of the Royals but especially the witty, dutiful Queen, her loving relationship with Phillip and the family and the deep respect that her staff hold for her.
Rozie who is British-Nigerian with a military background is a great sidekick and her relationship with the Queen is developing over the series. I enjoyed reading about Sandringham (the previous two books are set at Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace) as well as I have often seen on television the Royals walking to Christmas Day church services and can now better picture the estate and the surrounding area. An enjoyable holiday mystery!!
11. Christmas at the Shelter Inn by Raeanne Thayne
Setting: Small mountain town in Idaho
Natalie Shepherd grew up at the Shelter Inn hotel owned by her family in Shelter Springs, Idaho, but when she graduated college she swore she wouldn’t return to the small mountain town where she had experienced so much loss. For the past 10 years, Natalie has been a digital nomad exploring the world but she drops everything and heads home when she receives a message from her younger sister, McKenna, asking for help with when she’s put on pregnancy bed rest a few weeks before Christmas.
Natalie returns to Shelter Springs for the holiday season to help care for her two young nieces and to run the Shelter Inn which her sister has transformed into a community of seniors’ apartments. Shortly after arriving, Natalie reconnects with Griffin Taylor, her late brother’s best friend, who is now a doctor in the small town but still struggling with his own losses and sense of guilt.
Christmas at the Shelter Inn is a heartwarming holiday story about the struggle to heal and move forward after experiencing tragic loss. Set in a charming small-town, there’s a delightful community of seniors, two adorable little girls, a sweet romance and all the magic of the festive season.
12. Christmas at the Lake by Anita Hughes
Setting: Lake Tahoe, United States
A sweet holiday romance that takes place in a charming village called Christmas Cove on the shores of Lake Tahoe.
Rebecca and her boyfriend Ben met in their final year at Berkeley and are co-founders of a hugely successful dating app that is soon to go public. On the morning of their Christmas Eve wedding in San Francisco, Ben breaks up with Rebecca and leaves on vacation with a beautiful attorney that works for their company.
Rebecca is heartbroken but decides to go by herself on their honeymoon to Lake Tahoe where she bumps into Zach, a film student she knew at Berkeley and finds herself organizing a New Year’s Night party for a business man she meets. Due to a misunderstanding, Zach believes that Rebecca is married to Ben and Rebecca believes that Zach is dating a sophisticated older woman named Meredith.
There are three separate romance stories taking place in Christmas at the Lake – Zach and Rebecca in present day Christmas Cove; a romance in Europe in 1990 that Rebecca reads about in a travel journal while planning the party and a story about a couple in New York City that Zach is being told by Meredith for a film he is making about first love.
An enjoyable romance about second chances at love and a great setting for a Christmas story. A charming Christmas village, falling snow, hot drinks by the fireplace, sleigh rides around the lake – it’s easy to imagine Christmas Cove in a Hallmark Christmas movie!
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin’s Press for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
13. Wreck the Halls by Tessa Bailey
Setting: New York City
Melody Gallard and Beat Dawkins are the children of two rock and roll divas who were hugely popular in the ’90s as the Steel Birds before a legendary feud broke up the band. Melody and Beat met once when they were 16 years old and felt an instant spark but had no other contact until they are approached by a producer of reality television offering each of them a huge sum of money if they can talk their mothers into reuniting for a Steel Birds concert in Rockefeller Plaza in New York City on Christmas Eve.
The two agree and embark on a madcap mission to convince their mothers to perform one last show together while being followed around the clock by a film crew recording their every move and streaming it to a live audience of adoring fans. The more time they spend together the more the attraction between Beat and Melody intensifies but at the same time a decades-old scandal threatens to ruin everything including their newfound relationship.
This was my first Tessa Bailey book and I had no idea that she was known as “the Michelangelo of dirty talk” until I read the jacket cover. Although it wasn’t a great fit for me, I’m sure it will be enjoyed by fans of the author or anyone who likes a super steamy holiday romance. This book takes place in the two weeks leading up to Christmas but the plot doesn’t really revolve around the holiday season apart from the reunion concert being set to take place in Rockefeller Plaza in New York City on Christmas Eve.
14. The Holiday Mix-Up by Ginny Baird
Setting: California wine country
Sweet but lonely waitress Katie Smith expects to be spending another Christmas alone until Juan Martinez, a handsome customer at the diner who she has a major crush on, asks her to pose as his girlfriend for Christmas day festivities at his family’s winery. Katie has reservations but agrees hoping the fake date might lead to a real relationship.
In a twist of fate, Juan is in a serious accident shortly after telling his family that Katie will be joining them for Christmas and is put into a medically induced coma, Katie meets his family at the hospital and they immediately embrace her as Juan’s girlfriend. Katie knows she should tell the Martinez family the truth but she had promised Juan that she wouldn’t tell anybody and the Martinez family are so welcoming that she’s reluctant to give up the feeling of being part of a family again. To make matters even more complicated, the more time Katie spends with Juan’s younger brother, Mateo, the more she wonders if she fell for the wrong brother.
The Holiday Mix-Up is a cute spin on the rom-com movie While You Were Sleeping that takes place in California wine country in the week leading up to Christmas. It’s a light, cosy read with a chaste, sweet romance, a close knit Latinx family and a festive holiday backdrop!
Thank you to NetGalley and Sourcebooks Casablanca for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
15. The Wishing Bridge by Viola Shipman
Setting: Frankenmuth, Michigan
Henri grew up in the small town of Frankenmuth, Michigan where her family owns the world’s biggest Christmas store but after graduating college she chose a different path accepting a position in Detroit with a mergers and acquisitions firm and turning down a marriage proposal from her high school boyfriend.
Henri is now in her ’50s, has never married and hasn’t been home for the holidays in years as her career always takes priority. Unfortunately, her job is now in jeopardy unless she can convince her parents to sell their beloved business to a firm that would gut everything in the name of profit so Henri heads back to Frankenmuth for the holidays in order to gather the intel she needs to make the deal happen.
The Wishing Bridge is a heartwarming holiday story about the importance of family and of being a good person combined with a sweet mid-life/second-chance romance. The characters are surrounded by Christmas in a charming small town that’s a winter wonderland in December so this is a very festive read. The setting was my favourite part of this book – I have never been to Frankenmuth, Michigan but I sure want to visit now!
Thank you to NetGalley and Harlequin Trade Publishing for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
16. Hercule Poirot’s Silent Night by Sophie Hannah
Setting: Norfolk, England
Hercule Poirot, the famous Belgian detective, and Inspector Catchpool from Scotland Yard are summoned by Catchpool’s mother to Norfolk a few days before Christmas in 1931 to investigate the unsolved murder of a hospitalized man. Cynthia Catchpool is staying at the crumbling seaside mansion of a woman who is convinced that her terminally ill husband will be the next murder victim if he moves into the hospital as scheduled in January. Poirot and Catchpool reluctantly travel to Norfolk but hope to solve the baffling crime as quickly as possible so that they can make it back to London in time for Christmas.
An entertaining new Hercule Poirot mystery by bestselling crime novelist Sophie Hannah that is the 5th in a new set of mysteries that has been fully authorized by the Christie estate. Hercule Poirot’s Silent Night reads well as a standalone so there’s no need to read the books of the series in order.
I was obsessed with Agatha Christie mysteries as a teenager and, although it has been years since I have read any, I thought Sophie Hannah did a good job capturing the Poirot character and his mannerisms. Hercule Poirot’s Silent Night is an intriguing mystery with plenty of suspects and I enjoyed the both the Norfolk and the Christmas season setting. I never once figured out an Agatha Christie ending so was happy to have puzzled out a tiny aspect of this mystery but was clueless as to ‘whodunnit’ until Poirot revealed all!
17. The Christmas Orphans Club by Becca Freeman
Setting: New York City
Hannah and Finn have spent every Christmas together since their sophomore year at Boston College since neither have family to spend the holiday with – Hannah because she was orphaned as a teenager and Finn because his family disowned him when he came out to them. When they move to New York City post-college, their celebration expands with the addition of Priya and Theo to their December 25th celebration.
The story is told from both Hannah and Finn’s point-of-view in present day and over the previous Christmases. In the present timeline, Finn has announced that he is moving to LA for a job and this might be their last Christmas together. Hannah is terrified at the thought of losing Finn and her found family so is determined to make this a Christmas that Finn will never forget.
The Christmas Orphan’s Club was a fun holiday read that takes place almost entirely on Christmas days over a decade. I enjoyed that it was a bit original in focusing mostly on a group of friends and platonic love instead of a couple’s holiday romance (although there is a bit of romance too). A heartwarming story of chosen family and embracing the changes that occur in adult friendships over time and also a bit of a love letter to New York City during the holidays which was perfect!
18. Countdown to Christmas by Jo Thomas
Setting: Quebec, Canada
Chloe is a single British mum who will be home alone for Christmas for the first time as her son, Ruben, will be spending the month of December in New York City with his dad and dad’s wife and new baby. Chloe is dreading the month ahead of her when she receives a surprise call from a heir hunter advising her that she is the only living relative to a man who died in Canada without a will and stands to inherit his property.
Chloe is concerned at first that it is a scam but decides to pack the advent calendar of positive messages that Ruben made for her and travel to the small village in rural Quebec where the property is. She is soon fully immersed into the community helping out at the local diner serving up pancakes and baked goods made with maple syrup, organizing the town’s Christmas celebrations and spending time with handsome Theo.
There are a few holes in the inheritance plot, everyone in this rural Quebec village speaks English and it appears that they are tapping maple trees in January (the sugaring season usually doesn’t start until early March!) but leaving all that aside, it is a nice holiday read if you’re just looking for a pleasant bit of escapism. And it will likely make you want to visit Quebec during the holidays or at least add some tasty Canadian maple syrup to whatever you happen to be baking!
19. The Christmas Wager by Holly Cassidy
Setting: Small town near Denver, Colorado
An entertaining Christmas rom-com set in a charming small town in Colorado written by internationally bestselling suspense author, Hannah Mary McKinnon, under the pen name Holly Cassidy.
Bella is sent by her real estate developer boss in L.A. to the small town of Maple Falls, Colorado to acquire a local family-owned Christmas store that’s failing financially. Ambitious Bella is determined to get the property at the best price possible and secure a promotion for herself but the owner’s grandson, Jesse, stalls the deal. Unable to reach an agreement, the two agree to compete in the annual Maple Falls Holiday Games with the winner determining the selling price but as the competition heats up between these two rivals the sparks begin to fly!
This enemies to lovers/closed door romance has a great concept – you’ll wish that Maple Falls existed just to be a spectator at the town’s holiday games! It has fun Hallmark holiday rom-com vibes but it’s also about the importance of family, community, and doing the right thing. A cozy read that’s sure to get you in the holiday spirit!
Thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Random House Canada for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
20. Wrapped With a Beau by Lillie Vale
Setting: Small town in Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania
Elisha Rowe moved back to her small hometown of Piney Peaks in the Poconos mountains to work as the town’s film liaison and has secured the long-awaited sequel to Sleighbells Under Starlight, a beloved Hallmark-style movie that was filmed in the town in 1974. Unfortunately, she has also promised the production team that they can film on location at the beautiful gabled Victorian from the original movie but city boy Ves Hollins recently inherited the The Christmas House from his great-aunt and has categorically refused to sign the location release.
This spicy grumpy-sunshine/opposites-attract romance takes place in a picture-perfect snowy mountain town that does Christmas in a big way. From the opening chapter when Elisha heads across the street to investigate an apparent break-in while wearing elf pyjamas and brandishing a giant plastic candy cane as a weapon, Wrapped With a Beau is bursting with holiday cheer. This book is for the reader who loves a steamy holiday romance that’s heavy on the Christmas vibes!
21. Emergency Contact by Lauren Layne & Anthony Ledonne
Setting: NYC, planes, trains, automobiles en route to Chicago
Katherine, an ambitious New York City lawyer who hates Christmas, is hospitalized following an accident on December 23rd. Diagnosed with a concussion, she needs to be monitored for 48 hours and a call is placed to her emergency contact which just happens to be her ex-husband, Tom, since she neglected to update her information at work.
Tom was on his way to the airport to fly home to Chicago where he plans to propose to his girlfriend on Christmas Eve but feels responsible for Katherine so decides to bring her along. A blizzard complicates their travel plans and what should have been a simple flight turns into a series of misadventures involving planes, trains and automobiles as the pair tries to get from New York to Chicago for Christmas.
A cute holiday rom-com about a second chance romance from bestselling author, Lauren Layne, and her real life husband. Told in alternating chapters from both Tom and Katherine’s point of view, there’s banter, bickering and old feelings coming to the surface for this couple who are complete opposites but obviously belong together. A squeaky clean, festive romance that’s easy to read in one sitting!
Thank you to NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing for sending a digital ARC of this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
Pin This For Later
Lilian
So excited to add all of the books to my TBR! Have you read Lady Cavendish’s Christmas Caper by Camille Cabrera? It’s a new Christmas cozy mystery and this list made me think of it
Lisa Goodmurphy
No I haven’t read Lady Cavendish’s Christmas Caper – I’ll check it out though because I love a cozy mystery! Happy reading!!