Unexpected Goals by Kelly Farmer

Unexpected Goals
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Published: 11/2/21

Unexpected Goals is the second book in the Out on the Ice series from author Kelly Farmer. I’m kind of a sucker for sports and when you combine that with lesbians, I’m all in.

Canadian goalie Maisy Goode is the star goalie for the women’s professional hockey team, the Boston Ice. She is shocked when her arch rival American Jen Donato signs with the team. Maisy was the goalie in the Olympics when Jen scored the winning goal for the U.S. Jen had been pushed into Maisy and nothing was called. Maisy has always thought Jen a dirty player and can’t believe they are now on the same team.

The two have words on more than one occasion. Jen’s flippant attitude gets under Maisy’s skin and Jen can’t understand why Maisy can’t let the past go. Ultimately, they both have the same goal to bring the championship to Boston and agree that will be better accomplished if they work together and put the past behind them.

What starts as an uneasy friendliness turns to friendship when they both realize they have misjudged each other. They watch their favorite nature show together and the friendship turns into attraction for both of them. But Maisy’s straight or so she thought!

I like both Jen and Maisy. Jen is super chill. She has a habit of falling for straight girls who just want to experiment. Her feelings for Maisy feel different but she’s worried that it will end up just like all of the rest. She’s a very likeable character whose intensity on the ice is the complete opposite of how she is off of it. Her big Italian family drives her crazy but she adores them. She is patient and kind and is there to help Maisy deal with her concerns and unease.

I do like Maisy but she also got on my nerves a little. I understand her desire to name her sexuality and her fear over her families reaction to her not being as straight as she had always assumed she was. But thinking more about how the character is so  Type A and has a spreadsheet for everything, her overthinking makes sense.

I read the first book in the series, Out on the Ice and it was good to catch up with some of the characters. I didn’t like this book as much as I enjoyed Out on the Ice. Maybe because when I started that book, I thought Amy would annoy me, and then I realized I am Amy!  However, this is a solid read and I am really looking forward to what Kelly Farmer writes next.

ARC received from NetGalley for an honest review

 

 

Always Allie by Melissa Tereze

Always Allie
Category:
Published: 11/3/21

Always Allie by Melissa Tereze is simply a beautiful story. It is one that shouldn’t be missed. If you like a second chance romance that will warm your heart this is a perfect story for you.

Cassidy Lewis returns to Plumstoke after three years when her mother passes away suddenly. She had fled the small town life to make her dreams come true of running her own floral shop in London. She not only left her hometown behind but the town sweetheart Allie Campbell. Cassidy is now married to Danielle, who is way too busy at work to accompany her home for her mother’s funeral. Cassidy isn’t only dealing with her mother’s loss but with the guilt that she didn’t come home enough to see her.

Allie Campbell never stopped loving Cassidy despite how heartbroken she was when Cassidy left town. Now that Cassidy is back, Allie is the person she turns to for comfort and Allie is determined to be the friend she needs to help her get through her loss, even to her own detriment. Can Cassidy’s marriage survive or will the love that her and Allie once shared be reignited?

Allie is simply the sweetest. She loved Cassidy’s mother and thought she would one day be her mother in law. Her sudden death shakes the entire town. The moment she sees Cassidy walk in to the local bar she knows that love is as strong for her as it always was and she will do anything for Cassidy. It’s completely easy to fall in love with Allie. Cassidy is a little harder. But as someone who couldn’t wait to get out of my small town when I was younger, I can understand her desire to escape small town life and make it in the big city. The way she did it left a hole not only in Allie’s heart but Cassidy’s as well. Making amends for the past can help open up possibilities for the future.

The supporting characters are there to listen to Allie and Cassidy as they experience the pain of loss and the confusion over their unresolved feelings. Helen and Ash are wonderfully supportive friends and Cassidy’s dad, while dealing with the loss of his wife, holds onto Cassidy and hopes to never have to let her go again. Danielle, Cassidy’s wife is just plain awful. She has no redeeming qualities and I wish very bad things for her. In some ways, I think Cassidy believes that she deserves someone as awful as Danielle because of how she left Allie. But no one should have to suffer time with Danielle. I have so many bad feelings about this woman!

Melissa Tereze brings us flashbacks that give us insight into Allie and Cassidy’s past relationship and how absolutely perfect they were for each other.  I enjoy flashbacks when they benefit a story and these fit perfectly. When I finish a book I want to feel like it was time well spent and I want to keep a little bit of the characters in my heart.  Allie and Cassidy made it into my heart maybe more than any of Melissa’s other characters. That is saying something because I have a lot of love for Vanessa and Emma from Mrs. Middleton and Dom and Blair from Playing for her Heart. But there is just something irresistible about second chance love, especially when one has to work hard to redeem themselves.

Melissa Tereze is one of those authors who can bring the steam but is equally adept at bringing the sweetness of love and the sorrow of loss. Always Allie will always be one of my favorite of her books and I highly recommend it.

ARC received from the author for an honest review.

 

Lost in Love by Emily Banting

Lost in Love is an nice debut novel from author Emily Banting set in an idyllic English village. She brings us charming characters who have to overcome the events of the past in order to have the future they desire.

Anna Walker is caring for her ailing father after her mother’s death, along with working a full-time job. When she accompanies him to meet his new doctor, she isn’t impressed by Dr. Katherine Atkinson. Anna already has a distrust of doctors from events that transpired with her mother. Dr. Atkinson is infuriating, suggesting Anna’s father needs full time care that she is unequipped to provide with her full time job. That and she’s hot, so damn hot!  That makes Anna dislike her even more because who needs a hot doctor getting all preachy with them.

Katherine confesses her interests in the ladies to the town chatterbox. That’s so much easier than having to tell everyone and if she loses a few patients, she’s ok with that. She came to the village from the city after suffering a tragedy. She is looking for a peaceful place she can relax and try to move on. Her meeting with Henry Walker and his daughter Anna is unnerving. Most patients and their families love her but Anna’s obvious distrust is disturbing to her. It doesn’t help that she is attracted to the prickly Anna.

They develop a tentative friendship and Katherine starts helping Anna with her father. I love Henry. He’s a real sweetheart. He doesn’t want his little girl to take on the burden of taking care of him while working so much. Katherine succeeds in getting Anna to start taking her own health more seriously, because you can’t care for someone else without caring for yourself. Katherine and Anna are good characters. I want them to find happiness, that doesn’t mean they don’t get on my nerves with some communication issues.

Emily Banting paints a lovely picture of a charming English village with entertaining characters. I enjoyed this debut and look forward to what she brings us next.

ARC given by the author for an honest review.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Music and the Mirror by Lola Keeley

The Music and the Mirror
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Author:
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Published: 4/18/18

All I know about ballet is from childhood when Mikhail Baryshnikov was on tv with those too tight tights and I was grossed out. So my ballet knowledge is limited, but I know a fantastic story when I read one and Lola Keeley’s debut novel qualifies.

Anna Gales is the new ballerina at the Metropolitan Performing Arts Center in New York. She comes from Iowa to train with her idol, the greatest ballerina of them all, Victoria Ford.  Anna’s initial meeting with Victoria makes her feel her hero worship may be misguided. But it doesn’t take long for Victoria to see that Anna has that something special that makes a star. Victoria’s job is on the line and the best chance she has to save it is to make Anna the star of her season.

Victoria begins training Anna and the two become closer. Anna must deal with the jealousy of other dancers and Victoria’s former flame. But along the way, hero worship turns to something more and Victoria’s icy exterior is thawed by the girl next door Anna.

Victoria Ford is a wonderful character. A former ballerina whose career was cut short due to injury, who still feels pain everyday. Ballet is in her soul and she can never give it up. Her icy exterior is how she keeps people at a distance. She has mini flings but doesn’t open her heart up to anyone, until her heart makes the decision for her.

Victoria sees a kindred spirit in Anna, a much younger, but just as dedicated ballerina. She can’t help but gravitate to Anna, not just for her talent, but for her inherent goodness. Anna is just the sweetest. She has had a trauma in her life that could have broken her but made her all the more determined to fulfill her dream of being a ballerina. While Anna has a heart of gold she has a steely determination that Victoria admires.

Anna’s feelings for Victoria move from hero worship to disdain back to hero worship and finally to love. Lola Keeley takes her time to develop these characters and their relationship so I am fully invested. This is such a beautifully written book that I know I will reread many times. Victoria and Anna have captured my heart and I couldn’t recommend this book more.

Standout Moments: The curl of Victoria’s lip is cruel, and it’s clear that Anna is already beneath her contempt. This is intended as a final embarrassment, to make sure the only memory anyone may retain of Anna Gale is of stupidity. It’s every gym class that the new foster kid was laughed out of, every party she showed up to only to realize the invite has been a prank designed to make her the entertainment.

Victoria leans back against the leather of the seat and closes her eyes. As soon as she does, the first steps start to materialize, the scuff of leather against a wooden floor already forming beats only she can hear.

There’s something about this Anna, something Victoria hasn’t felt stirring in her gut for well over a decade. There’s something in the way the girl moves that makes Victoria’s own limbs stir once more, like a low voltage running just under her skin. There might never be another Victoria Ford, and she wouldn’t want there to be. She just might settle for unearthing the next best thing.

 

The AM Show by T.B. Markinson & Miranda MacLeod

The AM Show
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Published: 9/26/21

The AM show is the latest collaboration from T.B. Markinson & Miranda Macleod. A night of passion between a morning show legend and a young reporter should never have led to anything but love has a way of finding you even when you’re trying to keep it away.

Amanda Morgan is a national network morning show host. She seemingly has it all, but her divorce has done a number on her. Her ex-wife belittled her and her mother before her did the same and despite her success, Amanda is teetering on the edge. She arrives at her step-son’s wedding, which she footed the bill for, to be seated at the misfit table by her awful ex-wife. She shares a dance with a beautiful woman and is thinking this wedding is looking up, until she’s mistaken for a grandmother.

Dakota Washington is a young reporter for the Cock-a-doodle Rooster Report, a national agriculture program. She is shocked to see her hero and crush, the great Amanda Morgan, at her friend Valerie’s wedding. Dakota doesn’t let on that she recognizes Amanda. When Amanda is mistaken for a grandmother and flees the reception, Dakota follows her. The two end up in in bed and it’s beyond anything Dakota could have imagined.

The two don’t anticipate every seeing each other again but fate has other plans. Dakota is brought in as a fill-in co-host on Amanda’s show. Their contracts forbid any type of sexual relationship between the two but they can’t seem to resist each other. They have to decide if they are willing to sacrifice their careers for love.

I absolutely adore Amanda. On the surface she is icy and demanding. But beneath the chilly exterior, she is struggling with her confidence. She’s a forty seven year old morning show host whos has been discarded and belittled by her former wife, she’s been passed over for the lead news anchor position and she feels old. Having a young, beautiful woman desire her helps her get back some of her mojo. Despite how much she worries that Dakota is being brought in to replace her she can’t keep herself from falling.

Dakota is an absolute sweetheart. How can you not fall for someone who makes chicken noises on her first day as a network morning show host. Her crush on Amanda quickly becomes something more substantial as she sees the woman behind the public persona and wants to help Amanda see herself the way Dakota sees her. Amanda sees her value tied to her fame and recognizability. Dakota helps her to see her worth beyond her job.

The AM Show is an entertaining age-gap, workplace romance. T.B. Markinson and Miranda Macleod are fabulous writers on their own, but they are a force when they unite. I have enjoyed all of their collaborations but this one is my favorite. I highly recommend if you’re looking for a light-hearted rom-com.

Memorable quotes:  Amanda unclenched her fists, slipping into her on-air persona as she turned to face her tormentor with the same dispassion she might employ when preparing to interview an unsavory dictator. If she could make it through half an hour with Vladamir Putin at the G-8 summit without losing her cool, surely, she could show similar strength for a few minutes with her ex-wife now.

Amanda had never been the one-night stand type. But she’d never felt this desperate before, like her entire future rested on another person finding her desirable. Affixing her award-winning, million-dollar smile to her lips, Amanda held out her hand. “Okay, Rooster Girl. Care to dance?”

“Not only is Amanda Morgan the reason I went into broadcasting, she occupies the top slot of my celebrity freebie list.”

“I thought you were a chicken farmer!  Amanda seethed, her fists balled at the sides.                      “I said I worked for the Cock-a-doodle Rooster report.”

Anything less that perfection wasn’t allowed. It was like the entire world had turned into her mother, and Amanda was back to being the daughter who never quite measured up.

 

State of Grace by Addison Clarke

State of Grace
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Published: 8/12/21

State of Grace is an impressive debut novel from Addison Clarke. It is the first offering in the Moonflower Cove series, set in idyllic Moonflower Cove, Maine.

Actress Blake Calloway has spent seven years starring on a hit tv show. Her ex-girlfriend and current manager is waiting to hear whether it will be picked up by another network. Blake is cleaning out her father’s condo after his death and finds letters from her mother that her father had kept from her. Her father had told her she was unfit and Blake, at five years old, never saw her mother or sister again.

Blake decides to head to Moonflower Cove, Maine to reconnect with her mother and get some of her questions answered. Blake’s mother, Isla, is shocked but thrilled to see Blake again after so many years. She takes Blake to her farmhouse and introduces her to her wife Vera and their children as well as Blake’s sister Mason, who was only three years old when they last saw each other.

Alexis Holland has worked at Isla’s bar, Straight to Ale, since she was eighteen years old. Alexis is a big fan of Blake’s show and even writes fanfiction. She has a five year old daughter Harper. Alexis’s best friend Sophia and her partner live near door to Alexis and have been a lot of help to her in raising Harper. Alexis’s relationship with her family is nearly nonexistent but her chosen family have been there for her through a lot of difficult times.

Blake and Alexis have chemistry almost immediately. They are both so comfortable around each other. Blake always has people who want something from her but with Alexis she feels as if she can just be herself. Alexis can’t fathom what a rich, beautiful actress would want with her. Alexis has been through a lot and is weary of opening her heart when Blake will be leaving to return to her acting career. Will they find the courage to listen to their hearts or will fear and self doubt destroy their chance for love?

I really enjoyed this book. Blake and Alexis are charming and it’s easy to feel empathy for them. Blake having been separated from her mom and sister and the trauma that Alexis suffered make it very easy to want the best for them. The supporting characters fit perfectly, from Alexis’s adorable daughter, Harper, to her best friend and protector Sophia. Blake’s mother and her wife are important characters who give Blake the first semblance of a home and a family. Moonflower Cove also seems to be the mecca for lesbians in Maine, even the mayor likes the ladies!  This is my kind of town and I am looking forward to the second book in the series.

 

Satisfaction Guaranteed by Karelia Stetz-Waters

Satisfaction Guaranteed
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Published: 6/1/21

This is my first Karelia Stetz-Waters book and it won’t be my last. Satisfaction Guaranteed is absolutely hilarious and brings to mind the books of Robin Alexander. I hadn’t thought about naming my clitoris before and now I am. I think Princess Buttercup may be the winner!

Cade Elgin is as uptight as it gets and when she arrives at her aunt’s funeral to see everyone wearing gold lame and passing around flasks of whiskey she is properly horrified. But she’s the only one who takes issues with the shenanigans. Everyone else seems to be hopped up on edibles and enjoying the organ performance of “Uptown Funk”.

Ruth was like a mother to Selena Mathis so when her friends pressure her to give a speech at the funeral she can’t refuse. When Selena is nervous she tends to ramble and ramble. She reveals Ruth’s name for her clitoris, Belinda, Ruth’s feelings on teacups and tampons versus the cup. She keeps looking at Cade because on the worst day of her life, she can still appreciate a little eye candy.

Cade is ready to return home to her families art gallery that she pretty much runs on her own because her parents are too busy planning to buy a alpaca and getting high. Cade is 29 and has never had an orgasm. Seems like the perfect person to run a sex shop!  Her aunt Ruth leaves her store, Satisfaction Guaranteed to Cade and Selena to run together. Ruth isn’t a big fan of paying bills so the store is in serious trouble.

Despite her reservations Cade agrees to stay for a month and try to save the sex shop for her aunt and for this strange creature Selena. Selena intrigues Cade. She is beautiful, sweet and completely ok with working at a store that sells dildos, cookware and Christmas stuff. As they work together to try to save the store, they learn more about each other and their attraction grows. However, Selena is celibate and Cade is an orgasm virgin.

I adore Selena and Cade. Selena has an interesting backstory involving her ex and Cade sees the evil that woman is working with and has no problem pretending to be Selena’s fiance. Cade needs Selena to help her loosen up and Selena needs Cade to fight for her and help her see that she has value.

If you are looking for a low angst, laugh out loud funny book, I highly recommend. Instead of adding my favorite quotes, I implore you to just read the beginning of the book and enjoy the funeral. Not something I think I’ve ever said before, but this is what I hope my funeral will someday be. People talking about clits, getting high and rocking out to Bruno Mars!

Never Mine by Bryce Oakley

no title has been provided for this book
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Published: 5/14/21
It's Only Pretend, Right?

I enjoy Bryce Oakley’s books immensely and Never Mine is a complete delight. Fake dating is one of my favorite tropes and this book pulls it off beautifully.

Sage Carson is a world cup and Olympic soccer star recovering from her latest knee injury. Her reckless partying and sleeping around has her agent concerned. She suggests Sage find a respectable steady girlfriend to help secure an endorsement deal with Player One, a shoe company.

Willa Bellamy is an event planner at the Denver Zoo. She works with her best friend Kirk and has an adorable dog named Puddles. Willa needs a date for her ex girlfriends bachelorette gathering in Belize.

When Sage and Willa run into each other at their high school reunion Sage asks her if she wants to get out of there. Willa takes her out to a pizza joint. Not exactly what Sage was suggesting, but Willa’s cluelessness is charming. Sage and Willa chat and both are surprised at the good time they have together. They weren’t close in high school as Sage was the athlete and Willa nearly invisible as she lived in her brothers shadow.

Willa agrees to accompany Sage to her Gay-la event and Sage will be Willa’s plus one to the bachelorette festivities in Belize. Both are trying to deny their attraction. But the more time they spend together the more the lines get blurred. Will they have to courage to make the other one theirs?

I would slay dragons for Willa. She is the Meg Ryan of lesfic (before the bad plastic surgery). Willa is all rainbows, bunnies and good intentions. She is one of the few people who “see” Sage, not as a world champion athlete but as the amazing person she is. She instantly recognizes Sage’s reckless behavior as fear that without soccer she doesn’t know who she is. That the possible end of her soccer career has her floating along without a life raft. She helps Sage to see that she is a trailblazer and even without soccer, she is valuable. She can start a foundation to do good outside of soccer. Willa is Sage’s champion.

Sage fights for Willa. She hates to see her friends let another friend pick on Willa and knows Willa is too kind to speak up for herself. Sage can’t help but be drawn to Willa’s goodness and authenticity. They simply fit each other perfectly, no matter how much they try to deny it.

I adore this book and highly recommend it. It will leave a smile on your face and a lightness in your heart. Willa and Sage are simply adorable.

Memorable quotes: Willa had always been the nice girl in high school, the type of person everyone kind of dreaded being around because it made them feel worse about themselves.

Why in the world would Sage Carson hit on her? She wasn’t bad looking, but she wasn’t exactly the models and actresses that Sage was normally photographed with. Maybe Sage was just desperate. But good lord, even if it was an act of desperation, she’d had a shot at making out with Sage fucking Carson and had just… not.

Willa did her best to reach out and give Sage’s arm a pat. “Did I just win a Little League game or are we in love?” Sage asked through a laugh.

Willa pauses, “Let me ask you a question. Can you name all of the athletes who have come out since you did? Not only your team, but other sports, as well?”                                                  Sage shook her head, “Luckily, there’s a lot.”                                                                                    “But how many of them would have been comfortable being the first major lesbian athlete at that level? Probably not as many. What you did was brave.”

Seeing Sage stand at the podium was surreal. She knew Sage as the woman who ate salad at a pizza place, who was worried about not knowing the name of anyone who wanted a selfie with her, who asked her to practice a kiss in the kitchen… She was human then. Now she was otherworldly, the bright lights making her dark hair glow golden in an aura around her.

“She’s kind and caring. She volunteers at a women’s shelter. She is thoughtful and generous beyond measure. She loves animals and has a very cute dog. She’s an all-around dream girl.”

All The Little Moments by G Benson

All The Little Moments
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Author:
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Published: 8/12/2015

G Benson is one of favorite writers. In 2015 her debut novel, All the Little Moments, was released. I just read it this year and I am awed that it’s a debut novel. It allows all of the emotions to come out, just like life’s little moments do.

Anna Foster is a successful anesthesiologist in Brisbane. She returns home to Melbourne after her brother Jake and his wife Sally are killed by a drunk driver. She is shocked when she learns that Jake and Sally named her the guardian to  their two children, fifteen month old Toby and six year old Ella. Anna doesn’t want kids. Her and her girlfriend of three years, Hayley, are both too focused on their careers and even if they weren’t, motherhood is something they both agree isn’t for them. But looking into the faces of her niece and nephew and seeing so much of Jake and Sally, she knows she has no other choice but to be there for them.

Hayley ends things with Anna not wanting to to the long distance thing and knowing she won’t compromise her career to move to Melbourne. Anna is barely keeping it together as she moves into her brother’s home to raise her niece and nephew. Things take a turn when Anna, literally, runs into a beautiful woman at the grocery store. She then sees that same woman at the new hospital she gets a job in. Lane is so wonderful. She just wants to spend time with Anna, at whatever speed she is comfortable. Anna also makes a good friend in Kym, they bond over shared grief and Kym becomes a part of Anna’s new little family.

Anna loved the kids as her niece and nephew but the little moments they share, make it so clear to her that her place is with them. The way Toby clings to her when she drops him at daycare and says “Na” over and over begging her not to leave him. The way Ella snuggles into her and tells her about her day at school. Sitting on the couch watching Disney movies as Kym and Ella dose off and she makes eyes at Lane. Watching how the kids greet her Mom and how her Mom’s eye light up even through her sadness over the death of her son. These little moments all bring Anna to a place of peace she never expected to feel after losing her brother. It doesn’t come easily but Anna has the love and support of so many and she is a strong woman who deserves happiness.

I can’t even begin to express how much I love G Benson’s writing in this book. These characters were so well developed and nuanced.  I love Anna and how she cared for Ella and Toby, even though she was scared and angry that her life was disrupted. Lane is the perfect partner for Anna. She understand that the kids come first and that Anna has a lot going on and she just wants to be there to support and care for her. Kym is the perfect best friend and having Anna and the kids come into her life helps her just as much as it helps Anna.  Anna’s mother, Sandra is shattered at the loss of her son but is there to help Anna with the grandchildren she loves so much. Anna’s father shuts down and locks himself away because he can’t handle the loss.  Sally’s mother is a horrible person!  I have nothing nice to say about her.

I read this book a few weeks after my brothers death. Probably not the best idea I’ve ever had. But it actually helped me to see that life does go on and that despite the sadness there are little moments that not only show us that we will survive but that’s it ok to smile and laugh. All the Little Moments is a beautiful book that will make you laugh, cry (a lot of crying from all of the feelings)  and say some curse words (Sally’s Mom, legit asshole). Even with all of the feelings that that brings to the surface, I consider this to be a simply fantastic book.

Memorable moments: She pushed the thought that Jake was dead to the back of her mind, buried it as deep as she could. But there were times when she was doing something completely mundane, that her chest would tighten and, for no apparent reason, it felt like she couldn’t breathe.

“Anna, I’m sorry. I wanted to try. I didn’t want to be the bitch that left you after your brother died and you got dumped with this… this huge responsibility but I just… I can’t do this. It’s not me. And the firm… I just got promoted.” I’m sorry. Kid- I can’t. I can’t I love you. But I can’t.”

“Mama.” He gave a nonsensical cry again and then, “Da.”. The sound almost broke her heart. She wondered how long until he’d forget, until he no longer cried for the parents who had once shown up without fail.

Fuck, she missed her brother. She missed talking to him, hearing his laugh. While accidentally calling him had ripped a new hole in her, she kind of wanted to do it again just to hear his voice, like a balm- the sound could wash over her and take her away for a minute.

“Okay. My brother and his wife died in a car accident, leaving behind two tiny children. My girlfriend of the time, Hayley, and I flew over for the funeral, and when they read the will, we found out he had name me guardian of the kids. I never wanted kids, ever. It was why Hayley and I worked; we wanted the same things. But I agreed to take them on and so Hayley left me. Now I live in my dead brother’s house and am attempting to raise his kids in a city that I hate.” Anna picked her glass back up. “No offense”  Kym leant back in her chair. “Whoa.” A playful smile crossed her lips. Wait, you’re gay.”

Lane had walked in wearing a clingy white dress that draped over every curve like it had been made just for her. It was cut low- low enough that Anna was concerned she wouldn’t be able to look anywhere else. The white set off Lane’s dark sin in a way that had Anna mesmerised. In that moment, she couldn’t remember a single reason why seeing Lane was a bad idea. “Oi, do you need a napkin to get that drool.” Anna turned around to find Kym and a nurse friend of her grinning.

 

Sprinkled in the Stars by Violet Morley

Sprinkled in the Stars
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Published: 6/1/2021

Violet Morley’s debut novel Sprinkled in the Stars is a sweet story of love and understanding. The main characters seem at first glance like they wouldn’t fit in each other’s lives but some times the stars align in the most unexpected ways.

AJ Beckett is a paramedic with a seven year old daughter, Parker,  who is on the autism spectrum. They live with AJ’s sister Kate, who helps AJ with Parker. AJ works extra shifts and is barely scrapping by financially.  Melanie Cooper is an actress who has decided her current movie will be her last. She is seen as being difficult but really has anxiety and is probably on the spectrum as well.

The two women literally run into each other when Mel is trying to get away from the paparazzi. Their collision causes Parker’s ice cream to fall on the ground causing her to freak out. Mel scurries off with barely an apology. Their next encounter is at a benefit where Mel stumbles upon Parker when they both go in search of a quiet place as they are both overwhelmed by the noise.

On the set of Mel’s last movie she has an accident and AJ is called in to help. She saves Melanie’s life and afterwards Mel wants to meet her to thank her. AJ hasn’t been impressed with Mel’s behavior in the past and isn’t very interested in spending any time in her presence. But Melanie persists and they slowly get to know each other.

Despite AJ’s earlier impressions, she is impressed with how well Mel interacts with Parker. Parker is comfortable with Melanie right away. AJ and Melanie’s attraction continues to grow and despite AJ’s concerns about their financial disparity, they begin dating. They have Mel’s crazy ex and the tabloids trying to cause problems in their budding relationship but they can’t help but hope that they find their happiness with each other.

I am very impressed with this debut from Violet Morley. It is refreshing to have a character with autism and Parker was fabulous.  Young in age but an old soul who really was the glue that tied the whole story together. I felt for AJ having to take care of Parker during the tough moments while her dad flew in and got to be the fun parent. Melanie and Parker’s relationship was touching as they found kindred spirits in each other. The chemistry between AJ and Melanie was clear and they fit well as a couple and as a family unit with Parker.  I recommend this book if you want a low angst, heartwarming story.