The Last Route

A cozy fantasy series by James Heppe-Smith — found family, gentle magic, and slow-burn sapphic romance — following courier Wren Ashwick as she walks the most remote delivery circuit in the realm.

Low-stakes (with teeth) Cottagecore vibes Guild lore A hedgehog named Thistle

The Cozy Promise

No cliffhangers
Warm endings guaranteed
Slow-burn sapphic romance
Found family & gentle magic
No major character deaths
Sweet romance (fade to black)

Perfect for readers who loved:

Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree · The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune · Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea by Rebecca Thorne · A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher

What is cozy fantasy?

A genre built on warmth, not war.

Cozy fantasy is exactly what it sounds like: fantasy fiction that feels like curling up under a blanket. Instead of world-ending battles and grimdark despair, these stories centre on small communities, everyday magic, and characters figuring out how to build a good life. The stakes are personal — will the new bakery survive? Can these two stubborn people admit they like each other? — and the endings are warm.

The genre took off after Travis Baldree’s Legends & Lattes proved that readers were hungry for “high fantasy, low stakes.” But the roots run deeper than that. Cozy fantasy draws from the comfort of Tolkien’s Shire chapters, the domestic warmth of Diana Wynne Jones, and the gentle worldbuilding of Robin McKinley. What changed is that readers started saying it out loud: we want stories where nobody has to die for the plot to matter.

What makes a fantasy book “cozy”?

There’s no official checklist, but most cozy fantasy shares a few things: found family (characters who become each other’s people by choice, not bloodline), a strong sense of place (somewhere you’d actually want to live), competence (the satisfaction of watching someone be good at their craft), and emotional safety (you know things will turn out all right, even when they get difficult). Romance is common — often sapphic or queer — and it tends to be slow-burn rather than instant.

What cozy fantasy deliberately avoids is just as important. No grimdark nihilism. No shock deaths. No third-act betrayals designed to gut-punch you. Readers come to this genre for emotional recovery, not emotional damage. That’s not a weakness. It takes real craft to hold a reader’s attention with kindness instead of catastrophe.

Where The Last Route fits in

The Last Route is a twenty-book sapphic cozy fantasy series following Wren Ashwick, a courier assigned to the most remote postal circuit in the realm. She arrives bitter and expecting to fail. Over the course of the series she discovers that her “broken” magic is actually an extraordinary gift, falls in love with a hedge witch named Rowan, adopts a hedgehog familiar named Thistle, and builds a life in the communities she serves.

Each book covers one season — autumn, winter, spring, summer — cycling through the years as the series progresses. Every book tells a complete story with a warm ending. No cliffhangers. The romance builds slowly (the wedding is Book 8). And the magic is quiet: no fireballs, no dark lords. Just old shrines awakening through patient care, a hedgehog who communicates in stomps, and a courier who can feel the emotional history of the letters she carries.

If you’re looking for cozy fantasy that’s romance-forward, character-driven, and genuinely safe to love — this is it.

Books in the series

Read in order for the best slow-burn payoff. Twenty books planned.

Book cover of Dead Letters: a spilled bundle of letters and envelopes on a coastal cliff at sunset, a hedgehog peeking out among them, a lighthouse on the distant headland.
Book 1

Dead Letters

The post always gets through.

Book cover of Snowbound: a figure in a long coat walks through deep snow toward a small cottage glowing with lamplight, pine forest under a wintry sky.
Book 2

Snowbound

When the snows close in, the post still moves.

Book cover of Spring Forward: two figures stand on coastal rocks at twilight looking up at a tall lighthouse against a dramatic spring sky.
Book 3

Spring Forward

Some roads flood. The mail goes anyway.

Book cover of Midsummer Delivery: a bonfire blazes in a wildflower meadow at twilight, figures gathered around it, distant village under a summer sky.
Book 4

Midsummer Delivery

Some lights are worth keeping lit.

Book cover of Return to Sender: a courier walks an autumn lane toward a smoke-curled cottage, fallen leaves underfoot and golden trees overhead.
Book 5

Return to Sender

Some letters find their way home.

Book cover of The Deep Paths: a snowy forest opens onto a small glowing archway at the end of a path, dark winter trees framing the scene.
Book 6

The Deep Paths

Some routes run beneath the world.

Book cover of The Second Summer: a hedgehog dozes in a courier bag among wildflowers, a summer village with figures gathered by a winding river behind.
Book 7

The Second Summer

Some summers change everything.

Book cover of The Courier's Wedding: two figures embrace under a garden arch at sunset, a hedgehog perched on a chest in a lavender-filled foreground.
Book 8

The Courier’s Wedding

Some journeys end at the beginning.

Book cover of The First Year: a courier walks a sunlit autumn path down to the coast, a leather bag at her side with a hedgehog peeking out among letters.
Book 9

The First Year

Marriage is a route you walk together.

Read the blurbPre-order ebookReleases 30 July 2026
Five Years Home (The Last Route, Book 10) cover
Book 10

Five Years Home

Five years home, and the route holds.

Read the blurbPre-order ebookReleases 24 September 2026
Reading note: Each book is a complete story with a satisfying ending. No cliffhanger. Warm ending guaranteed.

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Reader reviews

A few reader reactions from Amazon and Goodreads (all 5★).

★★★★★

“This was such a wonderful story… so well written, it really pulls you in.”

— The Book Ssirren (Goodreads, 3 Mar 2026)

★★★★★

“The perfect book to pick up when you need an escape from the crazy of the world.”

— Mackenzie (Goodreads, 3 Mar 2026)

★★★★★

“Such a magical world of self-discovery wrapped in gentleness and acceptance.”

— Karen (Amazon, 24 Jan 2026)

★★★★★

“On the edge of my seat the entire time. Such warm fuzzies seeing them together.”

— The Book Ssirren (Goodreads, 3 Mar 2026)

★★★★★

“A really nice change of pace… the bonfire and dancing were perfect.”

— The Book Ssirren (Goodreads, 3 Mar 2026)

★★★★★

“Wren has quickly become a favourite. Going into the deep woods and gently coaxing them awake — so brilliantly done.”

— Michelle Shamy (Goodreads, 20 Mar 2026)

Quotes are short excerpts from reader reviews on Amazon and Goodreads.

Meet the characters

The people (and hedgehog) you’ll fall in love with.

Wren Ashwick

The Courier

Twenty-eight, bitter, and assigned to the realm’s most remote postal route as punishment. Wren arrives expecting to hate it, quit within months, and fade into obscurity. She has strong opinions about tea, a delivery log full of private observations, and a habit of humming when she thinks no one’s listening. Her sarcasm is a defence mechanism. Her quiet kindnesses are the truth.

Rowan Thornwell

The Hedge Witch

The hedge witch of Mosshaven, with warm brown skin, dark curly hair escaping her kerchief, and a cottage with a red door where the kettle is always warm. Her garden shouldn’t work but does. She finds Wren’s grumpiness delightful, refuses to be pushed away, and is working on finding Wren’s perfect tea blend.

Thistle

The Hedgehog With Opinions

A small, somewhat scruffy hedgehog with a perpetually sleepy expression, one slightly crumpled ear, and quills that catch silver in certain light. He communicates through stomps — one for yes, two for emphasis, rapid stomping for danger. Everyone mishears his name as “Bristle.” Wren has stopped correcting them.

Hester Coldwell

The Station Master

Fifty-four, weary, and thoroughly done with watching couriers fail. Hester runs the Thornwick Guild station with brisk pragmatism and communicates mostly through raised eyebrows and the quality of tea she offers.

Colm Brassworth

The Retired Courier

Sixty-eight, gruff, and the only person alive who walked the Last Route for forty years straight. Colm lives in a cottage on the edge of the Greymist Hills — books everywhere, herb garden, a knowing look whenever Wren asks a question he’s been waiting decades for someone to ask.

Elspeth Morrow

The Lighthouse Keeper

Keeper of the Widow’s Light for over fifty years, recording every ship and every storm in a log that stretches back three centuries. Solitary by preference and sharp by temperament. Her lighthouse is the most isolated stop on the coastal stretch.

The world of The Last Route

Aeldra: a realm roughly the size of Britain, where the interesting things happen at the edges.

The Last Route winds through the northwestern corner of Aeldra — the part the capital forgot about. While the Heartlands have their Academy of Practical Magics and their trunk postal routes, the northwest has cliff paths, mist-shrouded moors, and an ancient forest with opinions. It’s the kind of place where folk traditions run deeper than institutional knowledge, where a hedge witch’s garden matters more than a mage’s certification, and where the old magic never quite went away.

Wren’s circuit covers roughly two hundred miles and takes eighteen to twenty-one days to complete. She walks it year-round — through autumn storms, winter blizzards, spring floods, and the long golden days of summer — serving sixteen communities that have no other regular contact with the wider world. The route breaks into three legs, each with its own character.

The Coastal Stretch

Cliff paths · rocky headlands · the Sorrow Sea

Fishing villages clinging to cliffsides, a three-hundred-year-old lighthouse kept by a woman named Elspeth who’s recorded every storm for fifty years, and a hermit scholar who was the first person to name Wren’s gift.

The Highland Stretch

Moorland · sheep trails · standing stones

Heather and peat smoke, mist that appears from nowhere, and Mosshaven — the valley village where Rowan lives. Her cottage has a red door, a garden that shouldn’t work but does, and a kettle that’s always warm.

The Forest Passage

The Oldwood · root-tangled paths · deep silence

The Oldwood predates human settlement, and it tolerates passage without exactly welcoming it. Paths shift. The forest has moods. There are rules — stay on the path, don’t take without asking, be out by dark — and Thistle is essential for navigation.

The Postal Guild

The institution at the heart of the series is the Postal Guild of Aeldra — older than the Academy, older than the current monarchy, and operating under an ancient Charter that makes it answerable primarily to itself. Couriers swear oaths of neutrality and confidentiality. Attacking a courier is a serious crime.

Magic that works through care, not force

Magic in Aeldra exists in two traditions. The Academy teaches magic as science — measured, replicated, certified. The old folk way treats magic as relationship — something that flows through genuine connection between a practitioner and the world around them. Wren’s gift, object empathy, lets her sense the emotional history of what she carries. Rowan’s green witchery works through patience and nurturing, not power. And Thistle is a Truthseeker — an ancient type of familiar once bonded to all Legacy Route couriers, now almost forgotten and extremely rare.

Is this series for you?

A quick vibe-check, so you don’t waste a perfectly good evening.

You’ll probably love it if…

  • You like cozy fantasy with an emotional backbone (not just vibes).
  • You enjoy slow-burn romance that feels earned.
  • You’re here for found family, small communities, and practical magic.
  • You want warmth — but with the occasional moment of danger that matters.
  • You like watching someone who’s good at their job.

You might bounce if…

  • You want constant high action, big battles, or grimdark stakes.
  • You prefer romance to resolve in the first chapter.
  • You’re allergic to cosy village politics and gentle character growth.
  • You need explicit spice (this is sweet/fade-to-black).

Frequently asked questions

Everything you want to know before you start.

Do I need to read the books in order?

Yes, for the best experience. While each book tells a complete story, the character relationships and world-building develop across the series. The slow-burn romance especially rewards reading in order.

Are there cliffhangers?

No. Every book ends with a satisfying resolution. There are ongoing threads and developing relationships, but you’ll never finish a book feeling cheated or left hanging.

How spicy is the romance?

Sweet and slow-burn. The romance is central to the series but unfolds gradually over multiple books. Intimate moments are fade-to-black.

Are there any content warnings?

This is cozy fantasy designed to feel safe. No graphic violence, no major character deaths, no on-page trauma. The series is about healing, not harm.

How many books will there be?

Twenty books are planned, following Wren’s journey over twenty years. Each book covers one season, cycling through autumn, winter, spring, and summer as the series progresses.

How often do new books release?

The aim is rapid release — multiple books per year. Sign up for the mailing list below to get notified on release day.

Is this available in Kindle Unlimited?

Yes! All books in the series are available through Kindle Unlimited, as well as for purchase as ebooks and paperbacks.

Get a free bonus story

Join the Last Route reader community and we’ll send you Quills & Quiet — a bonus story told through Thistle’s eyes (PDF + ePub). Plus occasional release updates. Never spam.