December and January are traditionally lighter months for publishing, but February is ramping things back up again—just in time for picking out a book for your Valentine (or yourself)! Romance is a theme this month—but you’ll also find space adventures, inter-dimensional hijinks, magical libraries, monsters, and more.
A man who’s having a string of bad luck inherits an unlikely champion: an intimidatingly giant new friend named Spike, who’s determined to help him turn things turn around by any means necessary. (February 1)
“A dangerous alliance between a Vampyre bride and an Alpha Werewolf becomes a love deep enough to sink your teeth into in this new paranormal romance.” (February 6)
A new trilogy begins in this tale of knights who take an enemy hostage—and realize neither the empire they’re protecting, nor the magical order they’ve long been loyal to, are what they seem to be. (February 6)
“A mortally wounded magistrate faces his deadliest trial inside an ancient abbey where the monks are going mad and the gods themselves may be to blame.” (February 6)
“A collection of dark fairytales and fractured folklore exploring how our passions can save us—or go monstrously wrong.” (February 6)
“An original collection of interwoven short stories set in the Wild Cards universe, where an alien virus mutates some and grants superpowers to others,” featuring contributions from Carrie Vaughn, Cherie Priest, Max Gladstone, and more. (February 6)
The Momenticon series continues as Morag and Fogg race through a magical land, facing monsters, corruption, and worse—with the fate of humanity at stake. (February 6)
“A Holmes and Watson-style detective duo take the stage in this fantasy with a mystery twist.” (February 6)
The world of the author’s Celestial Kingdom duology expands in this collection tales set “before, during, and after the events in Daughter of the Moon Goddess and Heart of the Sun Warrior, all from the perspectives of beloved characters.” (February 6)
Described as “The Last of Us meets Bird Box,” this story explores a world in which “eye contact causes people to spiral into a deadly, violent rage.” (February 6)
In this Arctic-set horror thriller, former friends must put their differences aside in order to survive a contagion seeping from the melting ice. (February 13)
After a customer dies in her bookstore, a woman takes note of the mysterious volume he was reading. Before long, she’s targeted by collectors who’re dying to get their hands on it—and she’ll need to do everything she can to protect its magical secrets. (February 13)
The acclaimed short-story author’s first novel is about a trio of dead friends given a magical second chance—with some major conditions attached—to return to the world of the living. (February 13)
This new short-story collection explores “the rapidly changing role of technology and belief in our lives as we search for meaning, for knowledge, for justice; constantly converging on our future selves.” (February 13)
When a character is named “Carmilla,” you know vampires will be involved. Such is the case with this tale set at a Massachusetts college for women, where a new student soon makes an academic rival she finds both intimidating and alluring. (February 13)
An art thief who uses her secret magical powers to pull off heists seems unstoppable—until her daughter turns her in. A decade later, the old crew enlists the now-regretful daughter in their most dangerous job yet. (February 13)
The next cozy space-opera detective tale featuring Investigator Mossa and Scholar Pleiti after The Mimicking of Known Successes brings a new mystery to the table that’ll require a trip to Jupiter’s moon, Io, to solve. (February 13)
A pair of detectives venture into an AI-ruled parallel universe to discreetly recover the body of a politician’s son—a job that proves trickier than they’d first thought, especially as they start to realize the attraction between them. (February 13)
“Discover the full story of the sorceress Medea, one of the most reviled and maligned women of Greek antiquity.” (February 13)
This tale described as “both a crypto-comedic dystopian fantasy and a deadly serious dissection of our own farcical pre-apocalypse” takes place in a world where people immerse themselves in wearable tech that allows them to exist in virtual worlds—a handy escape until reality itself begins to fall apart. (February 13)
The YA author’s adult debut is billed as a “dark historical fantasy” that “explores misogyny and the soul-corrupting power of unrequited love through an enchanted lens of violence and revenge.” (February 13)
When his craft fails and his crew abandons ship, a veteran astronaut is left to try and save the mission—but soon realizes he’s not exactly alone in deep space. “Is this entity an alien presence, is RJ losing his mind, or is there a third option? What happens next will leave him with more questions than answers.” (February 13)
In this “historical novel with a speculative twist” set during World War I, a nurse sets out to look for her brother after starting to doubt the reports of his death. (February 13)
The sequel to horror novella What Moves the Dead finds retired soldier Alex Easton heading to their family’s ancestral hunting lodge for a peaceful retreat, only to find a new supernatural nightmare awaits. (February 13)
In this tale set in 2006, a forensic accountant Martin Hench, last seen in the author’s Red Team Blues, accidentally uncovers a deadly scheme involving ultra-wealthy Californians and the state’s privatized prison system. (February 20)
Collected for the first time in a single volume, and revised to represent Wells’ “preferred texts,” are two fantasy tales from the author of Witch King and the Murderbot Diaries. (February 20)
Set at a ritzy space hotel that becomes infiltrated by terrorists, this sci-fi thriller is described as “Die Hard meets The Martian—with a dash of Knives Out.” (February 20)
“Set in 19th century Sri Lanka and inspired by local folklore, the daughter of a traditional demon-priest—relentlessly bullied by peers and accused of witchcraft herself—tries to solve the mysterious attacks that have been terrorizing her coastal village.” (February 20)
Exes who unexpectedly reunite when they start working at the same company are separated again when their office becomes a battleground for a war between the gods. (February 20)
This novel takes place over 40 years and taps into “Black surrealism, mythology, and spirituality” to tell its tale of a conjurer who travels the South in the 1830s, rescuing enslaved people and helping them resettle in a community magically hidden from the outside world. (February 20)
“This reimagining of Zorro—featuring a heroic warrior sorceress—weaves Mesoamerican mythology and Mexican history two decades after the Spanish conquest into a swashbuckling, historical debut fantasy with magic, intrigue, treachery, and romance.” (February 20)
Inspired by Imperial Russia, this romantic fantasy kicks off a new duology and follows a pair of magical sisters raised to lead a rebellion against the gods possessing the royal family. (February 20)
A teen who is a “shifter”—they have two identities in parallel dimensions—must face the painful decision of deciding which world to make their permanent home. (February 20)
A child with the ability to see other versions of herself across dimensions discovers she has the ability to jump across timelines—honing her skills and escaping power-mad adults as she goes. But she may not be able to leap away from a sinister threat that’s chasing her through the multiverse. (February 20)
In this dark fairytale, woman is forced to undertake a high-stakes rescue mission within a dangerous magical forest. (February 27)
“A shield maiden blessed by the gods battles to unite a nation under a power-hungry king—while fighting her growing desire for his fiery son—in the first book of a Norse-inspired fantasy romance series.” (February 27)
A 100-year-old shipwreck off the coast of Iceland is slated to be destroyed, so an explorer decides to take one last look around—and realizes the vessel is still teeming with the ghosts of its past. (February 27)
This collection gathers the fantasy author’s shorter works into a single volume; it features both published and unpublished works, as well as a pair of brand-new stories written especially for this release. (February 27)
A human trapped in the Fae world bargains to save her village by taking over an enchanted but cursed library—all while dealing with the different alluring Faes she encounters, and plotting to cultivate her own magic. (February 27)
This collection includes a new introduction from the author, three original short stories, and the novellas A Pocketful of Crows, The Blue Salt Road, and Orfeia. (February 27)
This standalone tale set in the same post-apocalyptic world as the author’s Moon of the Crusted Snow follows a group of survivors traversing “unknown and dangerous territory to find a new home for their close-knit Northern Ontario Indigenous community more than a decade after a world-ending blackout.” (February 27)
This space opera brings together “sapphic romance, space pirates, a blind witch, and powerful priestesses” in its tale of a misfit who uses her abilities to manipulate space-time as a navigator aboard an Imperium ship. (February 27)
A librarian discovers she is a witch after falling in love with a witch—then must beef up her magical education in a hurry if she wants to help save her new community. (February 27)
“When a young man and woman both awaken aboard a starship floating who knows where into space, without any memory of how they got there, the last thing they expect is to fall in love. As more people begin to awaken, the mystery deepens and rivalries begin to jeopardize everyone’s survival. Can our two young lovers save their world before it even begins?” (February 27)
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Source: Gizmodo