Danlo,
I have recently finished up the urban fantasies
Ysabel by Guy Guvriel Kay and
The Mystery of Grace by Charles de Lint, as well as the steampunk
Mainspring by Jay Lake. Greatly enjoyed all three. And all three can be read as stand alones!
Ysabel is set in the modern world in the south of France. It is a sequel of sorts to his Fionavar Trilogy, but I think it could probably be read as a stand alone without a problem at all. A Canadian teenager traveling with his father is sucked into an ancient and accursed love triangle which has killed untold thousands over the centuries.
The Mystery of Grace is a very short book, though I think it is long enough to be a novel rather than a novella.

A lady mechanic meets the love of her life a couple of weeks too late - and to tell anything more would be way too spoilery.

It is set in a fictional Southwest US desert city, possibly inspired by Phoenix.
Mainspring was fun. It is set on an alternate Earth in a universe where everything is powered by wound up springs. An angel comes to a young clockmaker's apprentice and tells him that the spring powering the Earth needs its every 2,000 years winding or the world will be destroyed, and that it is up to the kid to get it done. No one believs the kid, and his resulting journey is nearly crazy creative, and very different.
And the wine book turned out to be OK. The various winemakers are mages who can put different sorts of spells into their wine - such as healing spells or wind spells. It was different, and I would be willing to read the rest of the series.