Blog Tour + Excerpt & Giveaway: Lily Love by Maggi Myers

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Lily Love by Maggi Myers

Title: Lily Love
Author: Maggi Myers
Expected Release: June 24th 2014
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Caroline used to have it all: she was madly in love with her husband, Peter, and they worshiped their beautiful baby girl. But as Lily grows into a toddler, Caroline notices that her daughter seems to live and act with a disconnect, and soon the perfect future Caroline had envisioned, along with her marriage, begin to crumble. Now she and Peter are no longer lovers, they’re plaintiffs in the throes of divorce while still struggling to care for Lily. After years of blame and overwhelming despair, Caroline’s chance encounter with a stranger at University Hospital opens her eyes to the prospect of accepting new support, new loves, and new dreams.

From the acclaimed author of The Final Piece comes a story of a family broken and unable to cope with a daughter’s disability. And a mother who finds that letting go of the life she imagined may be the only way to get to the life she was meant for.

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excerpt

Prologue

“Where’s my baby?” I startle awake. My heart starts racing before my mind completely registers where I am. A nurse hovers above me, tending to the frantic beeping of a monitor.

“Welcome back, darlin’. You gave us quite the scare,” she drawls out in a thick southern accent.

“Where’s my baby?” I try to sit up, but can’t coordinate my movements. The nurse silences the alarm on the machine she’s tending to. It’s then I realize all that noise was the rapid increase of my own heart rate on an EKG. The more the veil of unconsciousness lifts, the more aware I become of my surroundings.

No Peter.

No Lily.

The panic I feel in that moment is indescribable. Every instinct in me screams for me to get up and go find my daughter and husband. My body refuses to cooperate with my brain, taking a herculean effort just to lift my head.

“Shh, now.” The nurse speaks with a gentle firmness. “Your baby girl is just fine. She’s in the nursery with your husband. You can’t get yourself riled like that. You had a stroke, Mama. You’ve been in and out for two days.”
A stroke.

I close my eyes to sift through the pieces I can recall. I remember riding in the back of the ambulance and feeling nauseated from motion sickness. The paramedic who rode with me did his best to keep my spirits up, chatting about movies and books, anything to keep my mind off of my early labor.

“Caroline?”

The sound of my name brings me back to the present and to a harried Dr. O’Donovan.

“How are you feeling?” she asks. I blink at her, confused, as she uses her pen to scratch the bottom of my feet, sending an uncomfortable shiver through my body.

“Reflexes are good. You’re very lucky.” She sits next to me on the bed and shines a penlight into my eyes. “Do you remember what happened?” Her face reflects such kindness and compassion, it makes me want to cry.
***

“Is Peter here?” Dr. O’Donovan smiles brightly. Too brightly. I place a protective hand across my swollen belly and wait for bad news.

“No, he had a meeting he couldn’t get out of.” I swallow hard. “Why? What’s wrong?”

“Well, you have some protein in your urine and your blood pressure is elevated. Those are indicators of preeclampsia, which is very serious. The good news is the baby isn’t showing any signs of stress. Her heartbeat is nice and strong.” The doctor places her hand on my knee, squeezing gently.

“What is the treatment for that? Do I go on bed rest or something?” My mind races through the litany of things I thought I had two more weeks to take care of, none of which seems important now.

“The only way to resolve the preeclampsia is to deliver the baby,” she says in a manner so matter-of-fact, I’m almost put at ease. “Jackie will start an IV, so we can begin a course of magnesium sulfate immediately.”

“Wait,” I cut her off. “I need to go get my overnight bag and call Peter. Can’t I meet you at the hospital?” To punctuate my question, Dr. O’Donovan’s nurse, Jackie, comes into the exam room with her IV kit.

“Caroline, I don’t want to scare you, but this is very serious. Reception will contact Peter to let him know what’s going on.” Dr. O’Donovan knows how hard it was for me to get pregnant. She’s been my doctor through all of my fertility treatments and three miscarriages. She would never unduly alarm me.

“What exactly is going on? I don’t understand.” Fear shakes my voice.

“Listen to me very carefully, Caro.” Dr. O’Donovan grips my hands in hers and levels her resolute gaze on mine. “Jackie is going to start an IV so we can begin to treat you right away. The sooner we get your blood pressure under control, the better. This means that I need you to stay calm, okay?”

“Her name is Lily,” I whisper. I need her to know this isn’t “the fetus” or “the baby.” This is Lily Hope, the little girl I’ve dreamed of holding for the last nine months and prayed for all these years.

“Concentrate on Lily, Caroline. Once the IV is in, we’re going to ambulance you to Durham as a precaution. Duke is the closest hospital with a NICU. We’re being extra cautious; there’s no reason to think we will need it, but we want it on site if we do. Lily is full term at thirty-eight weeks; it’s going to be okay,” Dr. O’Donovan reassures me. “When we get you all checked in, we’ll induce your labor and then Lily will be on her way. You’ll be able to hold your little girl by tomorrow, Caroline.” As if she senses the conversation is about her, Lily kicks with a force that shakes my belly. “See? She’s ready for her debut.”

My little girl. I’ll get to hold her in just a matter of hours.
I tell myself to concentrate on that, and not to be scared, but I’m terrified.

Dr. O’Donovan is talking again.
“We had to induce your labor, and you had a very strong reaction to the Pitocin we used. It sped up the rate and strength of your contractions, also causing your blood pressure to spike. You had a mild stroke, Caroline. Do you understand?”
I nod my head, but I don’t really understand. My pregnancy was easy. Sure, I’d had some morning sickness in the first months, but that was it. Everything else had been flawless.

“Neurology will be in shortly to explain the logistics of what happened, but I’ll give it to you straight- you’re very lucky to be alive, and even luckier that the stroke was as mild as it was. You’re going to make a full recovery, Caroline, but this is it. No more pregnancies.” She studies my face while she waits for my reaction. Before I get a chance to make sense of what she’d said, Peter walks into the room.

“Caroline, baby,” he whispers as tears fill his eyes. The instant my husband sits on the bed and wraps me in his arms, my anxiety disappears.

“She’s so beautiful.” He is weeping. “She’s absolutely perfect.”

A moment later, the nurse with the heavy accent brings Lily to me. My arms shake with the effort of holding my beautiful girl, as hazy details of delivering her begin circulating through my brain.

Lily didn’t enter into this life with her eyes swollen shut, howling at the injustice of being ripped from her mother’s womb. She exploded into the world with her little eyes blinking in wonder, her lips pursed into a perfect pink rosebud. While the doctors and nurses rushed around my broken body, scrambling to keep me from slipping into the quiet call of darkness, a nurse placed Lily against my chest, encouraging me to focus.

“Look at her, Caroline. Look at your baby girl.” The nurse’s words had sounded tinny and distant through the thickness of my exhaustion. “Stay with us.”

“Caroline, open your eyes.”

I recall the furrowed concern on the doctor’s face as she cut the umbilical cord, and how Lily’s tiny body shuddered as she drew her first breath. It’s the last thing I remember before closing my eyes.

When Peter kisses my temple and brushes a finger down Lily’s cheek, my heart melts. I’m the luckiest woman in the world. After so many years of struggling with infertility, we’ve finally gotten our happy ending.

If I could go back to the moment I bought into that lie, would I change anything? I don’t know. To change the past would mean changing the future. If I admit I would change my choices, it makes me an awful person. If I say I wouldn’t change a thing, I’d be lying. That’s the way of the world, I suppose. We’ve been conditioned to believe that things always have a way of working themselves out and that happily ever after is within our reach, if we just work hard enough. The truth is that none of us are immune to tragedy. No matter how hard you work, no matter how good you are, life isn’t obligated to give us all a fairytale ending.

Sorta Fairytale

As I glance out the window of Children’s Hospital’s waiting room, the memories of my daughter’s birth haunt my mind. I’d been so incredibly naïve back then.

“Mrs. Williams?” I glance up as the nurse pulls me from my memory. “Yes?” I sigh.

“Lily is asking for you now.” The physician’s assistant is dressed in cartoonish scrubs that are meant be soothing to the young patients of Children’s Hospital. I find them mocking. You’d think after three years I’d grow accustomed to the fluorescent lights and sickly smell that are unique to hospitals, but they do little to soothe my frayed nerves as I wait, yet again, for Lily’s MRI to be done.

God, when did I become so cynical and bitter?

I follow her into the belly of the MRI clinic, where I hear Lily’s shrill cry. “Mama, Mama,” she wails.

When Lily finally started to use words in a meaningful way, her speech pathologist told me that “mama” was just a word approximation. A meaningless consonant/verb combination that she was using to test out her voice.

“She’s getting used to how her voice sounds, Mrs. Williams. It could be baba, yaya, dada. Those are sounds most babies make when they’re discovering language,” she condescended to me.

What the speech therapist couldn’t understand was what the word meant to me. It resonated with me on a level no else could ever understand. It meant that Lily recognized me, and it was a connection I needed more than I did air to breathe.

Now the most beautiful word in the world sounds like nails on a chalkboard. I feel like the biggest hypocrite for even thinking it.

“Is English her first language?” the P.A. asks.

If she’d bothered reading Lily’s chart, she’d know that Lily has profound speech delays. Her use of language is different from ours; her words sound foreign. Different. Everything about Lily is different; that’s why we’re here.

“Mama,” Lily slurs when she sees me. Without hesitation, I climb into the hospital bed and wrap her in my arms.

“Shh…Lily pad. Mommy’s here,” I whisper against her beautiful strawberry-blond hair.

“Mama, mama, mama…” she murmurs rhythmically into my chest.
“She’ll be out of it for a little while longer, Mrs. Williams,” the nurse explains.

I know the drill; this isn’t the first time Lily’s had to be put under general to have an MRI. It’s the only way she can be still enough for them to get an accurate reading.

My phone chirps from my purse as I close my eyes and breathe in the scent of Lily’s hair. Only one person would be texting me right now, and it makes my heart hurt.

He’s just checking on Lily; he doesn’t want you anymore.

No, Peter doesn’t want me anymore.

Despite my battle scars, the skin of my emotions is thin. The familiar pain of rejection tears open my heart once again. It hasn’t gotten any easier. The hurt is as pervasive as Lily’s problems, never ending, or with clear answers. Some things are never meant to make sense.

“Carolina on My Mind.” Max, the MRI technician interrupts my downward spiral. He fills the doorway and smiles at me. Max is beautiful at well over six feet tall; his gorgeous clear green eyes are set against skin the color of coffee with cream. I blush when I catch myself sizing him up.

“Hey, Max,” I whisper, “still speaking in musical metaphors, I see.” I give him a weak smile. His easy manner and the quirky way he speaks in lyrics only add to his appeal.

“How’s our girl?” he asks, brushing a hand across the top of Lily’s head. “She fell back asleep.” I watch curiously as he checks her chart notes.

Given the amount of time we spend at the hospital, we’ve seen quite a bit of Max. It shouldn’t surprise me that he cares about Lily–she is so easy to love–but it does.

My phone chirps again.

“Do you need to get that?” Max nods toward my purse, never taking his eyes from Lily’s chart.

“It’s okay.” I swallow hard, and try to sound carefree. “I can call him when we’re settled into a room.”

“Caroline, take a break.” He lifts his eyes to mine. “Call Peter back; grab a cup of coffee. I will stay with Lily Love.”

“Thank you, Max.” I smooth the hair from Lily’s face and gently climb down from the bed. “Please page me if she wakes up.”

“Of course, Caroline.” Max settles into the chair next to Lily’s bed. “I won’t let anything happen.” I know he won’t.

The first time I met Max, Lily was barely two years old. We had been ambulanced into the Children’s Hospital after Lily suffered a febrile seizure. I was a neurotic mess. Peter had been away on business and my sister, Paige, was on her way. I was staring at a pile of paperwork left behind by the admissions clerk when Max rescued me.

“I’m Max Swain from the MRI clinic. I can’t take Lily for her scan until they have an IV for anesthesia,” he said. “If you give me your insurance card, I can fill out the paperwork for you, and you can sign it when she goes in for her MRI.”

“Thank you,” I choked out.

“It’ll be all right, Mrs. Williams.” He placed his hand on my shoulder and gave me a warm smile.

“Caroline, please.” I sniffled.

When Lily’s IV was finally in place, Max had escorted us to Radiology, chatting with Lily the entire time. It didn’t matter to him that she didn’t answer; he just kept after her.

“I bet you like Sesame Street,” he tried. “No? How about Max and Ruby? Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood?”

Even though she couldn’t answer him, she fixed her hazel eyes on him and smiled. They clicked, and from that point Max became the bright spot on our trips to Children’s.

I look down at my phone now at the text message on the screen and feel sad. Peter: Hey, checking on Lily. How’d it go?

There’s this image I used to have of family coming together in moments of need, holding on to one another, being strong and resilient for each other. No one tells you how divisive crisis really is. How you’re forced to take on roles that you never intended, thus becoming someone you never wanted to be. I never wanted to be the mother of a child with special needs. I never wanted to be a failure as a wife.

I am both.

My daughter has an unspecified developmental disability and I’m alone. It’s not Lily’s fault and it’s not even Peter’s fault. It just is. That’s the horror of it all. I’ve had to sit by and watch my life crumble around me, knowing that there is no blame, no reason, just a tragic set of circumstances that no one has any control over.

Peter: Getting on the road in 15. Can I bring you dinner?
Me: Grabbing coffee, then heading back to MRI. Lily’s still in recovery.

If it weren’t so sad, I would laugh. I still feel an echo of the love we shared, but pain has long since taken its place. All that’s left is a bittersweet memory of the joy we had before Lily.
***

I met Peter in the fall of my senior year of college. I was standing in the keg line at the Sig Ep house, hoping to drown my chronic indifference with cheap beer. I was in a rut, feeling stuck in a relationship that had run its course, or at least that’s what I was thinking when I found myself at the front of the line. A boyishly handsome frat boy manned the keg, and made my heart stutter erratically in my chest.

“Hi,” he yelled over the party noise. “I’m Peter.” He held out his hand and, when I gave him my cup, laughed at me. Resting my cup on top of the keg, he reached his hand out to me again.

“Hi, Peter.” I blushed as I shook his hand. He stared at me expectantly, refusing to release his grip. “And you are?”

It made me nervous, how he commanded eye contact while he stroked my skin with his thumb. He was bold, unlike most of the boys I’d met so far.

“Taken.” I forced a smile and tried to ignore the stab of disappointment I felt.

If you’d just broken up with Trent, you’d be having lukewarm beer with this hottie, Ms. Non-commital Caroline.

Screw Trent. I cocked my head and flirted anyway. “It was nice to meet you, Peter. Can I please have a beer now?”

“Ouch.” Peter laughed and let go of my hand to grip his chest dramatically. “You slay me, beautiful nameless girl.” His smile spread warmth up my neck, staining my cheeks. “I’ll tell you what: I’ll refill your beer if you tell me your name.”

“Blackmail? Certainly a good-looking guy like you doesn’t need to resort to such things to get a date,” I teased, not feeling the slightest bit guilty.

“You think I’m good-looking?” Peter’s playfulness was adorable, and it was impossible to resist his charm.

“You know you’re good-looking,” I countered.

“I know you’re beautiful.”

I laughed. “Wow. You just have an answer for everything, don’t you?”

“Not everything, I still don’t know your name.” He handed back my full cup with reluctance.

“Caroline,” I finally answered.
“Caroline.” He smiled wistfully as he tried out my name.

I wasn’t one of those girls who giggled and swooned at the sight of a cute boy. Yet here I was, struck dumb by the sound of my name moving across the very delectable mouth of an equally delectable frat boy. I needed to get out of there before I started batting my eyelashes or something else just as horrific.

“Thanks for the brew, Frat Boy.” I chuckled when he crinkled his nose at the name.

“Caroline,” he called, as I turned to leave. Glancing over my shoulder, I found him still smiling at me. “I won’t need to blackmail you to get you to go to dinner with me.”

“Tell that to my date.” I giggled and blew him a kiss as I kept walking. I wasn’t ready to give Peter an easy in. Even back then, something in me knew how easy it would be to get lost in him.

A few weeks later, the boyfriend was a thing of the past. While I stood in the campus breezeway, waiting at the coffee cart, I ran into Peter again. He was right; he didn’t need to blackmail me into that date. I fell hard and fast, never taking a backward glance. I was young, in love, and completely idealistic. I finally had a plan, and it was all about me, Peter, and the life we would build together.

about the author

Maggi MyersBorn in West Des Moines, IA and raised in Miami, FL, I have an appreciation for the heartland and really good cuban food.

I want to write stories that make people think. The things you thought you knew about other people and their lives? I want to twist those perceptions and make you question everything.

I am a big fan of the underdog. The one that everyone else has written off? That’s where my heart is and where my most inspired writing happens.

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(1) $25 Amazon GC plus signed book, 3 signed paperback, 2 audible cd of Lily Love by Maggi Myers (US ONLY)

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Blog Tour + Excerpt & Giveaway: Better When He’s Bad by Jay Crownover

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I’m so excited to be a part of the BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD blog tour!! I have an excerpt for you today, as well as a fabulous giveaway!

Better When He's Bad by Jay Crownover

Title: Better When He’s Bad
Series: Welcome to the Point #1 (full reading order below)
Author: Jay Crownover
Publication Date: June 17, 2014
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New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Jay Crownover returns with a heart-stopping new series… Welcome to the Point.

There’s a difference between a bad boy and a boy who’s bad . . . meet Shane Baxter.

Sexy, dark, and dangerous, Bax isn’t just from the wrong side of the tracks, he is the wrong side of the tracks. A criminal, a thug, and a brawler, he’s the master of bad choices, until one such choice landed him in prison for five years. Now Bax is out and looking for answers, and he doesn’t care what he has to do or who he has to hurt to get them. But there’s a new player in the game, and she’s much too innocent, much too soft…and standing directly in his way.

Dovie Pryce knows all about living a hard life and the tough choices that come with it. She’s always tried to be good, tried to help others, and tried not to let the darkness pull her down. But the streets are fighting back, things have gone from bad to worse, and the only person who can help her is the scariest, sexiest, most complicated ex-con The Point has ever produced.

Bax terrifies her, awakening feelings she never thought she’d have for a guy like him. But it doesn’t take Dovie long to realize . . . some boys are just better when they’re bad.

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excerpt

“It was fend for yourself or starve around my house when I was little. I learned to make do.”

She swiveled around in the chair so we were facing each other. “Is that why you started stealing? That’s how you fended for yourself?”

I put the empty plate on the coffee table and gave her a stony look. She was always trying to make me into something better than I really was.

“No. People had stuff that I wanted, so I took it from them. Cars, TVs, credit cards . . . I wasn’t stealing to make do, I was stealing because I wanted stuff that I was never going to work for.”

She made a face at me and turned back to the computer. “That’s not entirely true.”

I gathered up my plate and her now- empty one. I needed a smoke and to get laid, and not particularly in that order.

“What do you know about it?”

She lifted a shoulder and let it fall. “I know you love that car and you didn’t steal it. I know that you wanted to do something nice for your mom, so you used your talents, as felonious at they might be, to get her this house. It wasn’t all about taking stuff just because you wanted it.”

I wasn’t used to anyone else being able to pick my true motivations out from the smoke screen I usually threw up. I couldn’t say I liked it very much.

“I’m gonna step outside for a minute.” She waved me off and I grumbled at her under my breath. Spending time with this girl was more headache than it was worth, even if I could still taste her all across my tongue and feel her like she was embedded under my admittedly thick skin.

I let the smoke of a cigarette fill and escape out of my lungs and tried to get a handle on my rampant thoughts. There was just too much going on. Everything with Race, Titus popping back up on my radar, this girl twining her way into the very fabric of who I was. I wasn’t sure I could handle any of it with barely a month of freedom under my belt. I wasn’t the kind of man who was big on self- discovery and personal growth, only right now it didn’t seem like fate wanted to give me the option of burying my head in the sand.

Reading Order: Welcome to the Point series

Better When He's Bad by Jay Crownover Better When He's Bold by Jay Crownover

#1 ~ Better When He’s Bad: EbookPaperbackGoodreads
#2 ~ Better When He’s Bold: Ebook • Paperback • Goodreads
#3 ~ Better When He’s Brave: Goodreads (2015)

about the author

Jay Crownover

Jay Crownover is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Marked Men series. She will also be introducing the dark and sexy world of The Point in a new series this summer starting with Better When He’s Bad. Like her characters, she is a big fan of tattoos. She loves music and wishes she could be a rock star, but since she has no aptitude for singing or instrument playing, she’ll settle for writing stories with interesting characters that make the reader feel something. She lives in Colorado with her three dogs.

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5 prizes for 5 individual winners!

–1st $100 Amazon gift card and a signed BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD for 1 winner
–2nd $50 Amazon gift card and a signed BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD for 1 winner
–3rd $25 Amazon gift card and a signed BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD for 1 winner
–4th BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD swag and a signed BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD for 1 winner
–5th BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD swag and a signed BETTER WHEN HE’S BAD for 1 winner

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Release Day Blitz + Giveaway: Burned by Tara Sivec

Burned by Tara Sivec

Title: Burned
Author: Tara Sivec
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Seventeen years old when he broke my heart.

Seventeen days later when another picked up the pieces.

Seventeen years together.

Seventeen thousand problems.

Seventeen days of reliving my past and finding a new future.

Seventeen minutes until it all went up in flames.

Seventeen breaths until I took my last.

This is my story…and it’s going to burn.

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about the author

Tara Sivec is a USA Today best-selling author, wife, mother, chauffeur, maid, short-order cook, baby-sitter, and sarcasm expert. She lives in Ohio with her husband and two children and looks forward to the day when they all three of them become adults and move out.

After working in the brokerage business for fourteen years, Tara decided to pick up a pen and write instead of shoving it in her eye out of boredom. She is the author of the Playing with Fire series and the Chocolate Lovers series. Her novel Seduction and Snacks won first place in the Indie Romance Convention Reader’s Choice Awards 2013 for Best Indie First Book.

In her spare time, Tara loves to dream about all of the baking she’ll do and naps she’ll take when she ever gets spare time.

Tara also writes under the pen name T.E. Sivec.

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Release Day Blitz + Giveaway: Falling for the Groomsman by Diane Alberts

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Falling for the Groomsman by Jen McLaughlin

Falling for the Groomsman by Diane Alberts
Series: Wedding Dare #1 (full series below)
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A sexy category romance from Entangled’s Brazen imprint…

She’s the one that got away. He’s the one she can’t forget.

Photojournalist Christine Forsythe is ready to tackle her naughty little to-do list, and who better to tap for the job than a hot groomsman? But when she crashes into her best friend’s older brother, Christine realizes her list needs updating. And fast. Tyler Dresco took her virginity during the best night of her life, then bolted. Now that they’re trapped together at a destination wedding, she’s going to get her revenge.

Tyler has never forgiven himself for how completely he lost control all those years ago. Being in Christine’s arms had felt right…until he realized what he’d taken from her in the hallway of a cheap motel. And oh, how she’s making him pay for it now. The insatiable heat between them has only grown stronger, but every time things heat up, Christine walks away.

With every encounter, things go a little bit further until Christine’s caught in her own trap of seduction. And before their time’s up, Tyler’s not the only one wanting more…

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Grab the rest of the Wedding Dare series!

Dare to Resist by New York Times bestselling author Laura Kaye
Baiting the Maid of Honor by New York Times bestselling author Tessa Bailey
Seducing the Bridesmaid by New York Times bestselling author Katee Robert
Best Man with Benefits by USA TODAY bestselling author Samanthe Beck

Dare to Resist by Laura Kaye Baiting the Maid of Honor by Tessa Bailey Seducing the Bridesmaid by Katee Robert Best Man with Benefits by Samanthe Beck

about the author

Diane AlbertsDiane Alberts is a multi-published, bestselling contemporary romance author with Entangled Publishing. She also writes New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal bestselling new adult books under the name Jen McLaughlin. She’s hit the Top 100 lists on Amazon and Barnes and Noble numerous times with numerous titles. She was mentioned in Forbes alongside E. L. James as one of the breakout independent authors to dominate the bestselling lists. Diane is represented by Louise Fury at The Bent Agency.

Diane has always been a dreamer with a vivid imagination, but it wasn’t until 2011 that she put her pen where her brain was, and became a published author.  Since receiving her first contract offer, she has yet to stop writing. Though she lives in the mountains, she really wishes she was surrounded by a hot, sunny beach with crystal clear water. She lives in Northeast Pennsylvania with her four kids, a husband, a schnauzer mutt, and a cat. Her goal is to write so many fantastic stories that even a non-romance reader will know her name.

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Win a $30 Amazon Gift Card and a signed copy of TEMPORARILY YOURS.

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Release Day Launch + Excerpt & Giveaway: Burn for Me by Lauren Blakely

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We are thrilled to bring you the Release Day Launch for Lauren Blakely’s BURN FOR ME! BURN FOR ME is an amazing novella in the Fighting Fire Series being published through Entangled Publishing’s Brazen imprint!! Start your summer off with a sizzle!

Burn For Me by Lauren Blakely

Burn for Me by Lauren Blakely
Series: Fighting Fire #0.5
Release Date: June 9th 2014
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A sexy category romance novella from Entangled’s Brazen imprint… 

She’s the one fire he can’t put out…

Jamie Lansing has had it bad for firefighter Smith Grayson for as long as they’ve been friends. Yes, he’s ridiculously charming and she might stare a little too long at his abs, but his dirty-talking, rough-around-the-edges ways aren’t for her. Plus, she knows that as a serial dater, Smith isn’t the type to settle down. But then a terrible, fantastic, mind-blowing mistake leaves her body craving more than one night.

Smith Grayson has only ever had eyes for one woman in town–his best friend Jamie. But convincing her a relationship between them will work is next to impossible with her refusing to see beyond his past. But when she asks for a week of no-strings-attached sex to get him out of her system, Smith knows this is his one chance to prove he’s not just the man she needs in her bed, but the man she needs in her life. 


NOTE: 10% of all release week sales will be donated by the author to the National Volunteer Firefighter Support Fund.

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excerpt

“Now that we’ve established you’re not thinking of rock stars, and that your mind isn’t anywhere but exactly where you want it to be, are you having a good time tonight?”

“I am having an excellent time. I’m very excited for the Spring Festival,” she said, doing her best to keep their chitchat friendly, because that’s all they were—friends. They’d be no good for each other as more. Opposites in every way. She was a romantic, he was a playboy, she was wine, he was beer, she was poetry, he was…wait, did he even read?

So not her type. She read all the time. Everything from poems to romance novels.

“And what is it that gets you most excited about the Spring Festival? Is it, say, the scent of cotton candy in the air?” he asked in a mock serious tone, as if cotton candy were a very important topic.

“Of course, seeing as I’m the keeper of that sweet treat,” she said, since she’d be running the cotton candy stand this year with her sister.

“I do love the taste of sweet things,” he mused, then inched closer to her, meeting her gaze, speaking in a low and sexy tone, making it clear he was enjoying the word play.

“You do?” she asked, as a spark zoomed through her.

“Some more than others,” he said, keeping his gaze locked on her as the bartender set down their drinks. He didn’t stop looking at her as he tossed some bills on the counter.“Like what?” she asked, unable to resist the suggestive back-and-forth.

“The ones that are sinfully delicious,” he said, in a voice laden with innuendo. “The kind of sweetness you almost need to repent for.”

Sinfully delicious. Those words thrummed through her, and she found herself hoping she was one of those sweet things.

Snap out of it.

When he raised his beer in a toast, she tried to steer away from the double entendres. She picked up her glass, clinked it against his, and took a drink. Her throat was dry, and she desperately needed the liquid. “To the festival,” she said.

“To the festival.”

“Tell me what else excites you,” he said, and it was clear he wasn’t talking about the festival.

Burn for Me teaser

about the author

Lauren BlakelyLauren Blakely writes sexy contemporary romance novels with heat, heart, and humor, and her books have appeared on the New York Times, USA Today, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iBooks bestseller lists. Like the heroine in FAR TOO TEMPTING, she thinks life should be filled with family, laughter, and the kind of love that love songs promise. Lauren lives in California with her husband, children, and dogs. Her novels include Caught Up In UsPretending He’s MinePlaying With Her Heart, and Trophy Husband. She also writes for young adults under the name Daisy Whitney.

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