July 18th, 2026
Home | Log in!
Welcome to FreshFiction

Are you a reader
or an author?

Help us personalize your experience. Choose your role below.
You can always change this later using the switcher button.

or

You can switch anytime using the floating button.

Limited Time Fresh Fiction Access

Exclusive Marketing Opportunities for Authors

Curious about how Fresh Access helps authors gain more visibility and connect with active readers?

Discover premium promotional opportunities, enhanced exposure, and author-focused services designed to help your books stand out.

Read More →

Escape Into Adventure, Romance, Suspense, and Magic This July

Find Your Perfect July Escape

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresh Pick of the Day

 


Berkley
January 2026
On Sale: January 20, 2026
Featuring: Anne Gallagher
400 pages
ISBN: 0593816498
EAN: 9780593816493
Kindle: B0F5PJYRTC
Trade Paperback / e-Book / audiobook
Add to Wish List

Amazon

Kindle

Read Kindle Preview

Barnes & Noble

Kobo

Apple Books

Google Play

Books-A-Million

Indie BookShop

Ripped Bodice

A woman learns to be the heroine of her own life in this heartfelt novel inspired byΒ Anne of Green GablesΒ byΒ New York TimesΒ bestselling author Virginia Kantra.

She believed life could follow a plotlineβ€”until the story she was living unraveled.

Anne Gallagher has always lived by the book.Β Anne of Green Gables, that is. Growing up on Mackinac Island, she saw herself as her namesake: the same impulsive charm, the same wild imagination, even the same red hair (dyed, but still). She followed in Anne Shirley’s fictional footsteps, chasing dreams of teaching and writing, and falling for her very own storybook hero.

But when a string of real-life plot twistsβ€”a failing romance, a fight with the administration, and the sudden death of her beloved fatherβ€”pulls her back to the island she once couldn’t wait to leave, Anne is forced to face a truth no story ever prepared her for. Sometimes, life doesn’t follow a script.

Back in the house she grew up in, Anne must confront her past and the people she left behind, including Joe Miller, the boy who once called her β€œThe Pest.” It’s time to figure out what she wants and rewrite her story to create her own happy ending. Not the book version. The real one.

Excerpt

β€œName?” The barista’s marker poised above the cup.

β€œAnne. With an e,” I added.

I waited for the answering glimmer that would identify the girl at the airport coffee shop as a kindred spirit. Any sort of recognition, I told myself, would be a sign. A connection, like a message from my dad.

When I was eight, my father brought a copy of Anne of Green Gables home from the library’s used-book sale. I’d been sick for a week, some kind of flu that left me confined to the house, antsy and bored. My easygoing father was useless in the sickroom, my mother said. (Uselessness, in her eyes, was a sin, like greed or envy or forgetting to take off your shoes in the house.) He’d stood there awkwardly in the door of my small room, his big carpenter’s hand wrapped around a battered green paperback with a red-haired girl on the cover, and I’d been overwhelmed with love.

He was not a reader, my dad. But somehow he’d understood (or been told by my English teacher, Mrs. Powell) that I needed Anne Shirley in my life. She became my fictional best friend, my inspiration, reassurance that a strange girl with a big imagination and a bigger mouth could find her place in the world.

Of course, I could never truly be Anne. I wasn’t Canadian, for one thing. Or a natural redhead. Or an orphan. But as soon as I turned eighteen, I had an Anne Shirley quote tattooed on my right arm, paid for with savings from working in my mother’s fudge shop over the summer: Tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it yet.

β€œLooks like a mistake to me,” my mother said when I’d proudly revealed my new ink.

The barista scrawled on the cup. β€œAnything else?”

Her voice broke into my memories. I blinked, abruptly recalled to the present. Around us, the terminal rang with footsteps, rattling wheels, and echoing flight announcements bouncing off the cavernous ceiling. β€œOh. No. Thanks.”

β€œReceipt?”

I shook my head wordlessly, stuffing a dollar into the tip jar. I was already running late. Again. I couldn’t miss my connecting flight. I grabbed my drink, glancing at the name written on the side of the cup. E-N-N.

Stupid tears pricked my eyes.

β€œNot everyone thinks Anne Shirley is a cultural icon,” Chris sometimes pointed out with gentle logic.

But Chris wasn’t here.

A lump lodged in my throat. Neither was Dad. Not here. Ever again. Gone. Another echo in the emptiness of my heart.

I was going home to my father’s funeral. Alone. Without my boyfriend.



Start Reading ANNE OF A DIFFERENT ISLAND Now



© 2003-2026 off-the-edge.net  all rights reserved Privacy Policy