@i_like2_sail2There are a few, mostly YA and romance. The problem is that except for those few novels that actually have Do Over in the title, the term is rarely used in the mainstream. You'd probably have to search Time Travel categories and narrow manually.
The Do-Over (2020) by Jennifer Honeybourne is about a teen girl who magically erases 6 months in order to pursue a different boyfriend.
There was a 2019 YA series called "The Do-Over" with each book written by a different author (https://lernerbooks.com/series/10726-the-do-over).
Christopher Golden had a book called The Boys Are Back in Town (2004) which involved time travel, black magic, and rewriting one's own past.
One of the major branches of the LitRPG genre involves a person's soul being reincarnated in a computer game/ in a fantasy world/ in a simulation/ in a space ship/ etc. Some of these could be considered pseudo-do-overs, but again you'd have to do a broad search and narrow by reading a lot of summaries. Also, a lot of LitRPG is self-published, so you're going to have to look at Kindle libraries not physical copies.