Tag: sapphic fantasy

  • Introducing The Last Route: Cozy Fantasy on the Move

    Introducing The Last Route: Cozy Fantasy on the Move

    If you’ve landed here wondering what The Last Route is and whether it’s for you — this is the post. No spoilers, no deep lore, just everything you need to know to decide whether a 20-book sapphic cozy fantasy about a postal courier sounds like your kind of thing.

    (Spoiler: if you like found family, slow-burn romance, hedgehogs with secrets, and stories where nobody has to save the world, it probably is.)

    The Premise

    Wren Ashwick trained at the Academy of Practical Magics. She failed. Not because she lacked talent, but because her talent didn’t fit into any of their categories. They called it a malfunction. She calls it a career-ending humiliation.

    Now she’s been assigned to the Last Route — the most remote postal circuit in the realm of Aeldra. It’s a three-week loop through coastal cliffs, highland moors, and ancient forest, delivering mail to communities so far from the capital that most people forget they exist. It’s considered the worst posting in the Postal Guild. A dead end for couriers nobody wants.

    Wren is furious about this. She plans to do her time and get reassigned somewhere that matters.

    She does not get reassigned.

    The World

    Aeldra is a roughly Britain-sized realm with four distinct seasons and a gentle, lived-in quality. The capital is far to the south. The Last Route runs through the northwest corner — a triangle of coast, hills, and forest where life moves at a slower pace and old magic lingers in places the Academy has forgotten about.

    The route has three legs. The Coastal Stretch passes through fishing villages and a lighthouse kept by a woman who’s recorded three hundred years of storms. The Highland Stretch crosses moorland and shepherding country, passing through the village of Mosshaven — a place that will become very important. And the Forest Passage cuts through the Oldwood, an ancient forest with a presence of its own, ending at a village called Hollowbrook that feels slightly out of time.

    Each stop has its own character, its own people, and its own reasons for needing a courier who keeps showing up.

    The Characters

    Wren Ashwick — the courier. Grumpy, competent, quietly brilliant in ways she hasn’t figured out yet. Her magic lets her sense the emotional history of objects, which is either a gift or a curse depending on how many sad letters she’s carrying that day.

    Rowan — the green witch of Mosshaven. Patient, warm, grounded. She has a cottage with a red door and a garden that shouldn’t be possible — things bloom out of season, plants grow where they have no business growing. She’s the sunshine to Wren’s grumpy, and their slow-burn romance is the emotional heart of the series.

    Thistle — a hedgehog. Appeared uninvited in Wren’s courier bag during her first circuit and has refused to leave. Communicates in stomps. Seems to know things a hedgehog shouldn’t know. Readers love Thistle more than any other character, and honestly, fair enough.

    Beyond the core three, the route is populated with lighthouse keepers, retired couriers, shepherds, scholars, forest wardens, and the kind of small-community characters who make you feel like you’ve visited a real place.

    The Cozy Promise

    Every book in the series delivers on a set of guarantees:

    The stakes stay personal and community-level. There’s no dark lord, no war, no apocalypse. The magic is gentle and grows through patience, not power. The romance is sapphic, slow-burn, and central — not a subplot. Found family builds across the entire series. Every single book ends warm. And Thistle is in every single one.

    If you’ve read cozy fantasy before — Legends & Lattes, Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea, The House in the Cerulean Sea — you know the emotional contract. The Last Route honours it completely. The difference is the setting: instead of one cozy shop, you get an entire route full of communities. And instead of a single book, you get twenty.

    The Structure

    Twenty books, each around 60,000 words. Each book covers one season, and the series rotates — autumn, winter, spring, summer — so you experience Aeldra in every light across twenty years of Wren’s life.

    The series is built in four phases. Books 1–5 are about survival — finding reasons to stay. Books 6–10 are about belonging — opening to love and community. Books 11–15 are about building — creating something lasting. And Books 16–20 are about home — growing old together in the place you made yours.

    Each book works as a complete story with a warm resolution. There are no cliffhangers. You can read at your own pace without anxiety.

    Where to Start

    Dead Letters (Book 1) is where Wren arrives on the Last Route for the first time, deeply unimpressed. It’s autumn. The coast is beautiful and unwelcoming. The locals are cautious. And a hedgehog has taken up residence in her bag.

    Six books are published now. The Second Summer (Book 7) releases 23 April 2026, with new books following every couple of months after that.

    You can find the full series, with descriptions and reading order, on the Last Route series page.

    Keep reading: Why I Wrote a 20-Book Sapphic Cozy Fantasy About a Postal Courier, What Is Cozy Fantasy? A Genre Guide for 2026.

    Want a free bonus story? Join the reader community and get Quills & Quiet — a Last Route short story — at heppesmithpublishing.com/thistle.


    James Heppe-Smith is the author of The Last Route. He lives in Northern Cyprus with two rescue dogs and a growing conviction that hedgehogs are underrepresented in fiction.

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Book links in this post are affiliate links — they cost you nothing extra, but help support this site and the writing of more cozy fantasy.

  • Why I Wrote a 20-Book Sapphic Cozy Fantasy About a Postal Courier

    Why I Wrote a 20-Book Sapphic Cozy Fantasy About a Postal Courier

    The honest answer is that I couldn’t find the book I wanted to read.

    I’d been deep into cozy fantasy for a couple of years — working through everything from Legends & Lattes to Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea to A Psalm for the Wild-Built — and I kept noticing the same thing. The settings clustered. Coffee shops, tea shops, bookshops, bakeries, magical inns. Beautiful settings, all of them. But after the fifth enchanted café, I started wondering: what else could cozy fantasy look like?

    Not what else could it be about — the genre’s emotional core is perfect and doesn’t need fixing. Found family, warm endings, competence, low stakes. That’s the promise, and I love it. But the container for those stories kept defaulting to a shop. A character settles somewhere, builds something, and the community comes to them.

    I wanted the opposite. A character who goes to the community. Who walks between villages, crosses moorland and coastline and deep forest, and carries connection with her — literally, in the form of mail.

    The Postal Route Idea

    I did what any sensible person does when they have a creative idea: I made a spreadsheet. I mapped every cozy fantasy setting I could find against two axes — saturated versus underserved, and static versus mobile. Coffee shops: saturated, static. Bookshops: saturated, static. Magical inns: moderately competitive, static.

    The mobile column was almost empty. Travelling artisans, maybe. Merchant caravans. And then, right at the bottom of my brainstorm: postal courier.

    I stared at that for about three days. A postal route gives you everything a shop does — a regular cast of characters, a home base, a sense of routine and ritual — but it also gives you the road. New faces at every stop. Landscapes that shift with the seasons. A protagonist who earns her community through showing up, reliably, in every kind of weather.

    And it gives you mail. Objects that carry weight and meaning. Letters that matter to the people waiting for them. Packages with history. For a character with the ability to sense the emotional resonance of objects, a courier’s bag is the most interesting place in the world.

    Why Sapphic

    Because that’s the love story I wanted to tell. Wren is prickly, exhausted, and convinced she’s been thrown away by every institution that was supposed to value her. Rowan is patient, rooted, and quietly extraordinary. They meet because Wren’s route passes through Rowan’s village, and at first it’s just tea and professional courtesy. Then it’s something Wren isn’t ready for.

    The grumpy/sunshine dynamic is one of my favourite things in fiction, and it works especially well in cozy fantasy because the genre gives it room to breathe. There’s no ticking clock forcing the romance forward. No third-act betrayal manufacturing drama. Just two people learning to trust each other, one delivery at a time.

    Sapphic cozy fantasy is also, frankly, a space where readers are hungry for more. The demand is real, the community is passionate, and the shelf isn’t as full as it should be. I wanted to add something to it that felt genuine — not a token subplot, but a love story that’s the emotional centre of the entire twenty-book series.

    Why Twenty Books

    Because the story I wanted to tell isn’t about a single season. It’s about a life.

    Wren arrives on the Last Route bitter, underqualified in her own mind, and determined not to care. Twenty books later, she’s the beloved elder of the communities she serves, married to the woman she fell for on her second circuit, and training the next generation of couriers. That arc — from exile to home — takes time. It takes years of walking the same path and discovering that the path was always the point.

    Each book covers one season. The series rotates through autumn, winter, spring, and summer, so readers get to experience Aeldra in every light. The route feels different under snow than it does under harvest sun. The communities change. Wren changes. And the magic — which starts as a confusing, involuntary thing she’d rather not have — slowly becomes the most important gift anyone on the route has ever carried.

    Twenty books also lets me keep the cozy promise without compromise. The stakes never need to escalate. I don’t need to manufacture a dark lord in Book 15 because the first fourteen were “too quiet.” The genre’s emotional logic — that warmth and connection are enough — holds across the whole series. It’s not about escalation. It’s about return.

    The Hedgehog

    Every cozy fantasy needs a familiar, and I was not going to use a cat. Cats are wonderful, but cozy fantasy has enough of them.

    Thistle is a hedgehog. A small, opinionated hedgehog who communicates in stomps — one for yes, two for emphasis, three for pay attention, rapid stomping for danger. Thistle appeared in Wren’s courier bag uninvited in Book 1 and has refused to leave since.

    What readers don’t know yet — and what Wren is only beginning to figure out — is that Thistle is far more than a cute companion. But I won’t spoil that here. I’ll just say that the hedgehog earns its place in the story in ways that go well beyond comic relief.

    Thistle is also the character readers mention most in messages and reviews. More than Wren. More than Rowan. The hedgehog. I’ve made my peace with this.

    Writing From Northern Cyprus

    I live in Northern Cyprus now, after a long route of my own — England, Germany, and then the eastern Mediterranean. The landscape here doesn’t look much like Aeldra (too many olive trees, not enough rain), but the rhythm of small-community life absolutely shaped the series. The way everyone knows the postman’s name. The way neighbours show up with food when something goes wrong. The way a place can feel like the edge of the world and the centre of it at the same time.

    The Last Route is fiction, but the feeling it’s built on is real. That sense of belonging to a place not because you were born there, but because you kept showing up.

    Where Things Stand

    Six books are published. The Second Summer (Book 7) releases 23 April 2026. The series runs to twenty books, and I’m writing ahead of the publication schedule, so the pace should stay steady — a new book every couple of months.

    If you’ve read this far and you’re curious, start with Dead Letters (Book 1). Wren is at her grumpiest. Thistle is at his most mysterious. And the Last Route is about to become much more than a delivery run.

    You can find the full series on the Last Route series page.

    Keep reading: Introducing The Last Route: Cozy Fantasy on the Move, What Is Cozy Fantasy? A Genre Guide for 2026.

    Want a free bonus story? Join the reader community and get Quills & Quiet — a Last Route short story — at heppesmithpublishing.com/thistle.


    James Heppe-Smith is the author of The Last Route, a 20-book sapphic cozy fantasy series published by Heppe-Smith Publishing. He lives in Northern Cyprus with two rescue dogs who believe firmly in the cozy promise of warm endings and regular meals.

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Book links in this post are affiliate links — they cost you nothing extra, but help support this site and the writing of more cozy fantasy.

  • The Complete Sapphic Cozy Fantasy Reading List

    The Complete Sapphic Cozy Fantasy Reading List

    If you’ve ever typed “sapphic cozy fantasy” into a search bar hoping for a nice long list to work through, you already know the frustration. The books exist — more every year — but finding them means piecing together BookTok recommendations, Reddit threads, and Goodreads lists that mix cozy with grimdark with “has one queer side character.” Not quite what you’re after.

    This list is what I wish I’d had when I started looking. Every book here has a sapphic romance that’s central to the story (not a subplot you could blink and miss), and every one delivers on the cozy promise: low stakes, warm endings, and the kind of reading experience that makes you feel better, not worse.

    I’ll keep updating this as new titles come out. If I’ve missed something, let me know in the comments.

    The Essentials

    These are the books that come up every time someone asks for sapphic cozy fantasy. If you haven’t read them yet, start here.

    Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree

    The book that kicked off the cozy fantasy boom. Viv, a battle-worn orc barbarian, retires from adventuring to open a coffee shop in a city where nobody knows what coffee is. Her slow-burn romance with Tandri, a succubus with remarkable people skills, is one of the genre’s warmest love stories. The sapphic element isn’t the focus of the plot — it’s simply part of who these characters are — which makes it feel all the more real. If you haven’t read this, it’s the starting point for a reason.

    Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea by Rebecca Thorne (Tomes & Tea series)

    Where Legends & Lattes features a sapphic romance alongside the shop-building plot, the Tomes & Tea series puts the relationship front and centre. Reyna (royal guard) and Kianthe (realm’s most powerful mage) quit their jobs to open a bookshop and tea house in a tiny town. They’re already together when the series starts, which is refreshing — the tension comes from building a life, not from will-they-won’t-they. Four books and counting, with Tea You at the Altar covering their wedding. This is probably the single best sapphic cozy fantasy series running right now.

    The Honey Witch by Sidney J. Shields

    Marigold, a young woman trained in honey magic on a tiny Irish island, has always been warned against falling in love — the family curse means love will only bring heartbreak. Then a woman called Lottie arrives on the island and upends everything. The prose is gorgeous, the setting is cottagecore perfection, and the central romance aches in the best way. One content note: the book does contain an on-page death, so it runs slightly darker than the other titles here, though it resolves warmly.

    Shop & Settle Stories

    For readers who love watching characters build something — a shop, a home, a life — with the person they’re falling for.

    A Nest of Magic by Kate Moseman

    Explicitly marketed as sapphic cozy fantasy, and it delivers. A witch running a magical boarding house navigates small-town politics, mysterious guests, and a slow-building romance. Moseman also maintains one of the best lists of sapphic cozy fantasy titles online, so she clearly knows the genre inside out. Warm, gentle, and exactly what it promises to be.

    Coffeeshop in an Alternate Universe by C.B. Lee

    A short, sweet novella that does exactly what the title suggests — two women falling for each other across the counter of a magical coffee shop. It’s slight compared to the longer series on this list, but it’s perfect when you want something you can finish in an afternoon and still feel warm about the next day.

    Tavern Tale by Kristina W. Kelly

    A retired adventurer takes over a run-down tavern and finds herself entangled with the locals, the local magic, and a woman she wasn’t expecting. The “retired adventurer builds something peaceful” setup echoes Legends & Lattes, but Kelly gives it a distinctly sapphic centre and a community that feels lived-in and real.

    Creatures & Keepers

    Magical creatures make everything cosier. These books pair sapphic romance with animal care, dragon keeping, and the quiet joy of tending to something small and wonderful.

    The Phoenix Keeper by S.A. MacLean

    Aila is a keeper at a magical zoo, and she’s been tasked with caring for the last known phoenix — who appears to be dying. Enter Luciana, a mysterious scholar with secrets of her own. The zoo setting is gorgeously realised, the phoenix plotline gives the story just enough stakes without tipping into darkness, and the romance unfolds with the kind of slow patience that cozy fantasy readers crave.

    The Tea Dragon Society by Kay O’Neill

    A graphic novel — and a beautiful one. Tea dragons are tiny dragons that grow tea leaves, and the story follows a girl who learns the ancient art of caring for them. The sapphic elements are gentle and woven naturally into the narrative, and the art is so warm you’ll want to live inside it. There are several volumes now, each as lovely as the last. Perfect for when you want something cozy but don’t have the energy for a full novel.

    Witchy & Wonderful

    Witches and sapphic romance go together like a cauldron and a flame. These titles lean into the magical side of cozy.

    A Ruthless Lady’s Guide to Wizardry by C.M. Waggoner

    Dellaria Wells is a fire witch, a drunk, and a disaster. When she takes a bodyguard job to earn some quick coin, she meets Mrs. Totham — composed, elegant, and completely out of her league. Waggoner’s writing has more bite than most cozy fantasy (Delly is genuinely rough around the edges), but the found family, the romance, and the warm resolution earn it a place on this list. Think cozy with an edge.

    I Ran Away to Evil by Mystic Neptune

    A warrior princess who’d rather bake cookies than fight evil shows up to defeat the Dark Lord, who turns out to be a lonely, practical woman who invites her in for tea. The premise is pure joy, and the execution matches it. Funny, sweet, and genuinely romantic. If you want sapphic cozy fantasy that doesn’t take itself too seriously, this is the one.

    Pumpkin Spice & Poltergeist by Ali K. Mulford & K. Elle Morrison (Maple Hollow series)

    Sapphic paranormal romance meets cozy small-town vibes. The Maple Hollow books blend witchy settings, gentle supernatural elements, and WLW romance in a way that feels like autumn in book form. Light, warm, and perfect seasonal reading.

    Something Different

    These don’t fit neatly into the categories above, but they absolutely belong on a sapphic cozy fantasy list.

    How to Get a Girlfriend (When You’re a Terrifying Monster) by Marie Cardno

    A dimension-exploring witch and an eldritch shape-shifting monster fall for each other while trying not to get consumed by the Endless. It’s stranger and funnier than anything else on this list, but the tenderness at its centre is unmistakably cozy. If your taste in sapphic romance runs to “weird, warm, and completely original,” you’ll love this.

    The Last Route by James Heppe-Smith (20-book series)

    This is my own series, so take the recommendation with whatever grain of salt you like — but I wrote it specifically because I wanted more sapphic cozy fantasy that didn’t revolve around a shop.

    The Last Route follows Wren Ashwick, a failed mage assigned to the most remote postal route in the realm of Aeldra. Over twenty books, she discovers her “broken” magic is something extraordinary, falls in love with a green witch named Rowan, befriends a hedgehog called Thistle who communicates in stomps, and builds a life among the overlooked communities along her circuit.

    The romance is slow-burn and central. The grumpy/sunshine dynamic builds through the first five books into a relationship that deepens beautifully across the rest of the series. The stakes stay personal, every book ends warm, and the sapphic love story is the emotional spine of the whole thing.

    Six books are out now. The Second Summer (Book 7) releases 23 April 2026.

    Start with Dead Letters (Book 1), or explore the full series on the Last Route series page.

    What’s Coming Next

    The sapphic cozy fantasy shelf is growing fast. A few 2025/2026 releases worth watching:

    Tea You at the Altar by Rebecca Thorne — the latest Tomes & Tea book, covering Kianthe and Reyna’s wedding. The Keeper of Magical Things by Julie Leong — a follow-up to The Teller of Small Fortunes, sending two mismatched mages to the dullest village in the realm. Agnes Aubert’s Magical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett — from the Emily Wilde author, featuring a widowed cat rescuer caught in a magical turf war. And of course, The Second Summer (The Last Route, Book 7) from yours truly, releasing 23 April 2026.

    I’ll update this list as new titles publish. If you know of a sapphic cozy fantasy I’ve missed, drop it in the comments — I’m always looking for more.

    Keep reading: What Is Cozy Fantasy? A Genre Guide for 2026, If You Loved Legends & Lattes, Try These Cozy Fantasy Series.

    Want a free bonus story? Join the reader community and get Quills & Quiet — a Last Route short story — at heppesmithpublishing.com/thistle.


    James Heppe-Smith is the author of The Last Route, a 20-book sapphic cozy fantasy series published by Heppe-Smith Publishing. He writes from Northern Cyprus, where the cats are plentiful and the coffee is strong.

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Book links in this post are affiliate links — they cost you nothing extra, but help support this site and the writing of more cozy fantasy.

  • If You Loved Legends & Lattes, Try These Cozy Fantasy Series

    If You Loved Legends & Lattes, Try These Cozy Fantasy Series

    You know that feeling when you finish a book and just sit there for a minute, not ready to leave the world yet? That was me after Legends & Lattes. Travis Baldree did something that shouldn’t have worked on paper – an orc barbarian opens a coffee shop, zero world-ending stakes, and somehow it became one of the most beloved fantasy novels of the decade.

    And then you’re left wanting more. Not a sequel (though Bookshops & Bonedust delivered). You want that feeling again. The warm mug in your hands, the found family assembling around the counter, the quiet satisfaction of watching someone build a life instead of burning one down.

    I’ve spent a frankly unreasonable amount of time chasing that feeling through the cozy fantasy genre. Some of these books gave me exactly what I was looking for. Others surprised me with something I didn’t know I needed. All of them belong on your shelf if Viv’s coffee shop felt like home.

    The Books That Scratch the Same Itch

    Can’t Spell Treason Without Tea by Rebecca Thorne

    If Legends & Lattes is the book that launched cozy fantasy, this one perfected the sapphic corner of it. Reyna and Kianthe quit their high-stress jobs (royal guard and realm-saving mage, respectively) and open a bookshop-tea shop in a tiny town. The appeal is identical to L&L – watching two people choose peace over duty – but Thorne leans harder into the romance, and it works beautifully. The Tomes & Tea series now runs to multiple books, and readers devour each one. If you want the cozy shop vibe with a central sapphic love story, start here.

    The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune

    Linus Baker is a caseworker for magical children, and he has never once broken a rule. Then he’s sent to investigate an orphanage on a remote island, run by the charming and mysterious Arthur Parnassus. The emotional DNA here is pure Legends & Lattes – found family, institutional rigidity versus genuine warmth, a quiet person discovering they’re allowed to want a different life. Klune writes with a gentleness that never tips into saccharine. You’ll ugly-cry at least once. Fair warning.

    The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

    Mika Moon pretends to be a witch on the internet (she actually is one), gets hired to tutor three young witches at a crumbling manor house, and finds exactly the family she’s spent her whole life pretending she doesn’t need. The cottagecore vibes are immaculate. There’s a handsome librarian. The children are wonderful. It doesn’t reinvent any wheels, but it spins the existing ones with such warmth that you won’t care.

    A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers

    Technically solarpunk sci-fi, not fantasy. I don’t care, and neither will you. A tea monk named Dex travels between communities serving drinks and listening to people’s problems. Then a robot wanders out of the wilderness with a question about what humans actually need. It won the Hugo for a reason. Chambers writes the kind of gentle philosophical fiction that makes you set the book down and stare at the ceiling, wondering if maybe everything will be okay. Two novellas, both short, both essential.

    The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst

    A librarian smuggles banned spell books to a remote island and opens an illegal jam shop that secretly runs on magic. The premise alone is doing about four things I love. Durst nails the cozy fantasy formula – beautiful island setting, gentle community, botanical magic, and a romance that builds through shared work and mutual respect. Her follow-up, The Enchanted Greenhouse, doubles down on the botanical angle and is arguably even cosier.

    Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett

    An antisocial academic travels to a snow-bound Scandinavian village to study the local fae. Her charming rival follows. What unfolds is part cozy mystery, part slow-burn romance, part genuinely fascinating faerie folklore. This one has a slightly different energy to the shop-and-settle stories – there’s more adventure, more intellectual puzzle-solving – but the found family builds just as naturally, and the complete trilogy delivers on every promise it makes.

    Ones to Watch in 2026

    Cozy fantasy isn’t slowing down. A few titles on my radar this year:

    Agnes Aubert’s Magical Cat Shelter by Heather Fawcett drops the Emily Wilde academic setting for a plump, pink-cheeked widow running a cat rescue that gets caught up in a magical turf war. Everything I’ve seen suggests this is going to be pure comfort reading. The Keeper of Magical Things (following The Teller of Small Fortunes) by Julie Leong sends two mismatched mages to catalogue magical objects in the dullest village they can find – and naturally, nothing stays dull for long. Both are strong bets if you’re hungry for more.

    The Gap Nobody’s Filled (Until Now)

    Here’s something I noticed after reading dozens of these books: the settings cluster. Coffee shops, tea shops, bookshops, bakeries, magical inns. All wonderful. All increasingly familiar. The most creative entries in the genre tend to be the ones that plant their flag somewhere unexpected.

    That observation is partly why I wrote The Last Route.

    When I started plotting a cozy fantasy series, I kept asking: what setting gives you the warmth and community of a shop-based story, but also lets you meet new people, visit new places, and follow a character across an entire world? The answer that kept coming back was a postal route.

    The Last Route follows Wren Ashwick, a failed mage assigned to the most remote delivery circuit in the realm of Aeldra. She’s bitter, she’s qualified for better things (or so she thinks), and she has no idea that her “broken” magic is actually something far more extraordinary. Over the course of the series, she discovers that objects carry emotional history she can feel, befriends a hedgehog with an attitude problem, falls slowly and irreversibly in love with a green witch named Rowan, and learns that the overlooked places along her route hold magic that powerful institutions have forgotten.

    If you loved Legends & Lattes for the found family, the competence, the “someone builds something meaningful” arc – that’s the spine of this series. But instead of one shop, you get an entire route full of communities. Lighthouse keepers and shepherds and retired couriers and a village deep in an ancient forest that feels slightly out of time. The romance is sapphic, the stakes stay personal, and every book ends warm.

    Six books are out now, with The Second Summer (Book 7) releasing 23 April 2026. The series runs to twenty books in total – enough to properly live in Aeldra if you want to.

    You can find the full series on the Last Route series page, or grab The Last Route: Dead Letters (Book 1) to start the journey.

    What Makes Cozy Fantasy Work

    I think the reason Legends & Lattes resonated so deeply – and why the genre keeps growing – comes down to a single thing: permission.

    Permission to want a story where nobody dies horribly. Permission to care about whether the pastries turn out right. Permission to read something that makes you feel better instead of worse. The world has enough grim. These books say: it’s okay to want warmth. It’s not shallow. It’s not boring. It’s the bravest thing a story can do – promise you safety and actually keep that promise.

    Every book on this list keeps that promise. I hope you find something here that gives you exactly the reading experience you need.

    Keep reading: What Is Cozy Fantasy? A Genre Guide for 2026, The Complete Sapphic Cozy Fantasy Reading List.

    Want a free bonus story? Join the reader community and get Quills & Quiet — a Last Route short story — at heppesmithpublishing.com/thistle.


    James Heppe-Smith is the author of The Last Route, a 20-book sapphic cozy fantasy series published by Heppe-Smith Publishing. He writes from Northern Cyprus, where the Mediterranean light is pretty cozy in its own right.

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Book links in this post are affiliate links — they cost you nothing extra, but help support this site and the writing of more cozy fantasy.