The Lantern House Trilogy: The Complete Trilogy
Declan Marsh
The house sits at the edge of a small snowbelt town on the south shore of Lake Superior — a place where the light fails at four in the afternoon and the lake-effect snow comes sideways off the water and nobody who wasn't born here stays without a reason. It runs on soup and wool blankets and the philosophy of its that some people need a place that does not ask them to explain. Its residents are solitary northern shifters whose animals were never built for belonging, and who found their way here because here is the one place that does not ask them to be more than they are.
Three books. Three couples. Three complete happily ever afters.
When Snow Remembers: Owen Halvorsen — lynx shifter, rare-book conservator, seventy-nine years old and expert at being forgotten — has kept Lantern House invisible for decades. Then a flood damages the founding journals, and the county archivist arrives with careful hands and the specific patience of a man who will not let something irreplaceable unsave itself. Owen has spent his entire life learning that being seen is the first step toward being owned. Jonah is about to teach him the difference.
When the House Sang: Stellan Aalto knows what he is capable of when he is hungry. The wolverine shifter has organized his entire existence around never being that hungry again — until a winter whiteout strands two young fox-shifters at the house and a choir director named Elias Frost starts listening to what Stellan's careful roughness is actually saying underneath.
When Antlers Fell: Hugh Mikkelsen — moose shifter, greenhouse keeper, a man who clears the paths before anyone else is awake and never says a word about it — has kept himself small for twenty years. Milo Barrett is a botanical illustrator whose whole practice is rendering overlooked things impossible to ignore. He has started looking at Hugh.
The Lantern House Trilogy is a slow-burn found family series about solitary men learning that proximity is not a cage — and that the house they built their survival around has been building something else entirely, one careful act of witness at a time.
All three novels are complete standalones with guaranteed happily ever afters. High heat. Deep feels. The table fills.
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