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November 22, 2025

Cover Reveal: Falling Star Enchantment

It’s a dreary Saturday at my house, because half the family’s out with colds. But I have good news to brighten up the day: the final book of the Cambion Club trilogy is now available for preorder! (Digital only; the paperback will be available closer to release day).

If you enjoyed meeting Peregrine and Dora, the beta couple in Twelfth Night Sorcery, you're going to love getting the rest of their story in Falling Star Enchantment. It releases January 10. Something to look forward to after the holiday season winds down, maybe? Here’s the cover to whet your appetite.

Green book cover for "Falling Star Enchantment" by author "Anne Rollins." The cover depicts a white woman facing away from the viewer, staring at a full moon and a shooting star streaking across the night sky. The woman wears a green dress and has dark, curly hair, cut in a bob. On the right hand side of the cover, in the foreground, there is a glass apothecary bottle, a white flower, and the logo for the “Cambion Club” series of Gaslamp fantasies. The cover art is framed by a vintage-looking silver filigree border. On the right-hand margin is a vertical box that reads “Dragonblade.”
Cover by Dar Albert

Blurb:

Can magic make the course of true love run smooth?

Peregrine Carrington marches to the beat of a different drum than the rest of Regency society. Having dedicated his life to the study of magic, his current goal is to create an enchantment that will catch a falling star. His spell requires too much magic to be cast by a single magician, so when a young sorceress visits Carrington Abbey, Peregrine is delighted to find a potential collaborator. As their intellectual partnership deepens into something warmer, Peregrine believes he’s found the love of his life—if only he can convince Dora’s guardians.

As the illegitimate daughter of a baronet, Dora Rossini has always lived on the margins of respectable society. With her father dead and her stepmother scheming against her, Dora is happy to exchange the hostility of her childhood home for the acceptance she finds at Carrington Abbey. Working with Peregrine to fine-tune his meteor spell gives her purpose, but being a woman, she is not allowed into magical societies dominated by men. When Peregrine leaves her behind to attend a house party for magicians in distant Cumberland, Dora thinks the only potential danger is that of missing him too much. . . until she hears alarming hints about the host of the house party.

Peregrine and Dora will need their wits, their magical ability, and their loyalty to each other if they want to both protect their magical scholarship and outmaneuver Dora’s controlling guardians to secure a future together.

This is a fun romp of a book, with less angst than Twelfth Night Sorcery. I hope readers enjoy going on an adventure with Dora and Peregrine.

Until next time, Rollins Readers!

Off white background. Dark purple-pink handwriting reads "Anne Rollins."
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