Cover Reveal: Cross Check by Lynn Stevens

(Ridder U Hockey, #1)
Publication date: January 27th 2022
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance, Sports

Synopsis:

She’s too trusting…

Elora has never been so cold. Growing up in the tropics did not prepare her for a new life in Minnesota. For the first time, she’s living in a place that doesn’t float and her best friend isn’t also her family. Everything is a new experience, a new adventure. Including hockey. The arena is freezing, but the game is fierce, fast, and fascinating. She can’t take her eyes off the action… or off a certain player.

He’s wary of everyone…

Wyatt is done with puck bunnies. He just wants to play, go to class, and be left alone. The opposite sex dishes out nothing but misery. School and hockey must come first. Then he meets Elora, and she’s totally clueless about hockey, about school, about a little bit of everything. And she’s the opposite of the ice queen who crushed his heart. But he’s not ready to light that lamp.

When Elora suffers a crisis of confidence, Wyatt’s willing to help her regain her faith in people, especially him. Even if it takes confronting his past to have a future.

Can Wyatt show Elora that he’s the man she thinks he is or will they end up being two ships passing in the night?

Buy on Amazon

About the Author

Lynn Stevens flunked out of college writing her first novel. Yes, she still has it and no, you can't read it. Surprisingly, she graduated with honors at her third school. A former farm girl turned city slicker, Lynn lives in the Midwest where she drinks coffee she can't pronounce and sips tea when she's out of coffee. When she's out of both, just stay away.

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Spotlight: By Any Other Name: A Cultural History of the Rose by Simon Morley

The rose is bursting with meaning. Over the centuries it has come to represent love and sensuality, deceit, death and the mystical unknown. Today the rose enjoys unrivalled popularity across the globe, ever present at life's seminal moments.

Grown in the Middle East two thousand years ago for its pleasing scent and medicinal properties, it has become one of the most adored flowers across cultures, no longer selected by nature, but by us. The rose is well-versed at enchanting human hearts. From Shakespeare's sonnets to Bulgaria's Rose Valley to the thriving rose trade in Africa and the Far East, via museums, high fashion, Victorian England and Belle Epoque France, we meet an astonishing array of species and hybrids of remarkably different provenance.

This is the story of a hardy, thorny flower and how, by beauty and charm, it came to seduce the world.

Excerpt

Any self-proclaimed cultural history of this special plant must be ready to engage with the notion of ‘culture’ in the two senses defined by the Merriam-Webster Dictionary: ‘the customary beliefs, social forms, and material traits of a racial, religious, or social group’, and also ‘the act or process of cultivating living material’. When approached as a plant the rose is primarily something of interest to the botanist and gardener, and related to the various meanings given to the care and cultivation of the natural world, and to the practical and economic considerations that arise from this attention. Engaging with the rose as a plant means recognizing its dependency on the soil, the elements and, often, the imperfect regard of concerned humans. We will then be concerned with the ecologically and biologically particular, which is determined by time and characterized by uncertainty, and this has the effect of rooting us in the earth and keeping us in contact with the tangible.

Crucial to the story of this organic rose is the fact that before the second half of the nineteenth century, as the British horticulturalist Jack Harkness writes, ‘nearly all European roses flowered for a few weeks like the cherry, the lilac, the hawthorn, the apple and the broom.

Th e miracle of flowering again and again made the rose a very special plant.’ In what often seems like an obsessive quest for a ‘master race’ of marketable roses, breeders created rose plants that would be significantly different from (what they saw as an ‘improvement’ upon) the roses of the past. In practice this meant that, equipped with the scientific knowledge that allowed for a more reliable outcome, and encouraged by very favourable market forces, modern rose breeders aimed to take the best characteristics of the roses traditionally native to Europe and the Near East and blend them with the roses of China. The result of such dedicated attention is the dominant roses of today; recent, humanly engineered mutations, the products of artificial selection. They are very different from the roses Shakespeare must have had in mind when he imagined Juliet likening Romeo to one. The word Shakespeare used is the same we use, and symbolically speaking the

associations it conjures up remain closely allied with those of Shakespeare’s time. But the plant is very different. In fact, the roses of today are even significantly different from the ones our four representative voices from the beginning of the twentieth century would have known. So the impact on the physical nature of the rose of this sustained human interest cannot be underestimated. Roses are thoroughly ‘people plants’, in the sense that many of them are wholly intertwined with human interests and values.

In thinking about how the rose might continue to replicate and reinvent itself, we must also consider how humanity’s relationship with it is being changed in the light of the current ecological crisis. Once upon a time, human historical narratives (traditionally narrowed to the stories told by and about powerful male humans) were characterized by overt or implicit praise of humanity’s uniqueness, superiority and essentially benign role. We could claim to be custodians of God’s creation, or of Earth’s bounty. But today in the Anthropocene, we have become painfully aware of the devastating effects humanity is having on the Earth’s ecosystem, and especially of how the failure to address the crisis will impact on future generations. Th e logic of the technoscientific system – the domination of fauna and flora, but also other peoples and cultures – has increasingly set humanity at odds with nature, but this tacit assumption of our superiority to the rest of the natural world is being profoundly challenged, and while the exceptional character of the human ‘animal’ when compared to all the others, even our closest mammalian relatives, is beyond question, we are now coming to terms with the realization that in the not too distant future

we might become extinct along with millions of other organisms, and that this collective demise to a significant extent will be due to our monumental stupidity. Seen from a non-anthropocentric perspective, and from the midst of today’s ecological crisis, human ‘reason’, perverted into a rigid and nature-abhorring ‘rationalism’, looks worryingly malign.

You might think that this tragic situation, and the soul-searching it makes necessary, need not trouble us while considering something as innocuous as the cultural history of the rose. But it seems obvious to me that if we are to do the rose full justice, it needs to be seen within this wider contemporary context of ecological crisis, just as we must consider the history of the rose in relation to the perceived prejudices of the past, and not simply as a delightfully coloured and sweetly scented escape from these realities.

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About the Author

Simon Morley is a British artist and art historian. He is the author of several books and catalogue essays on modern and contemporary art, and his art reviews and essays have been published in numerous magazines and journals, including the TLS, Modern Painters, Tate Magazine, the Independent on Sunday, World Art and Third Text. Previously a lecturer at the Sotheby's Institute and at Winchester School of Art, he is now Assistant Professor of Fine Art at Dankook University, Republic of Korea. He is also a keen rose gardener.

Spotlight: The New Billionaire Boss by Tina Gabor

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Publication date: September 28th 2021
Genres: Comedy, Contemporary, New Adult, Romance

Synopsis:

My life was finally on track.
Until my boss’s brother transferred to our office.

From the minute I met the broody, handsome, and infuriating Aiden Bronson, he was destroying all of my carefully made plans.

First, he hijacked my Uber. Then, he caused an accident that left me out of work for months.

Except, the disastrous day we spent together turned into the most fun day of my life.

And now, I can’t stop thinking about him. And that kiss…

I doubt he feels the same about me, and even if he did, any future together is hopeless.

He’s not allowed to date employees.
And without any family to fall back on, I can’t risk my livelihood.

But when he becomes my new boss, and we get trapped together in a beach house, I don’t know if I can resist risking it all.

THE NEW BILLIONAIRE BOSS is book one of the Bronson Billionaire Romance Series, but can be read as a complete standalone! Guaranteed to have you swooning and breathless. It includes a fierce and funny heroine and a charming, playboy hero.

Excerpt

Aiden

I stared at the woman standing outside of the Uber. She looked pissed. But I needed to get to our West Coast corporate retreat.

She opened my door, which took me by surprise. Did she have some type of mental imbalance, or was she on drugs?

She opened her mouth to speak, but her phone beeped. She looked down at her phone and then turned to the driver. "You canceled my ride!"

The driver shrugged. "He offered me $100."

She stomped her foot on the ground and threw up her hands. "You'd already started the meter!"

Damn. I thought she was just keeping the man waiting. I didn't know she was paying him to wait. That meant I was the asshole here. 

I sighed. Time to turn on the charm.

I stared directly into her green eyes. "Please forgive me." I saw her lips part just a little. Yup, she wanted me.

I shot her a flirty smile, reached into my wallet, and pulled out a $100 bill. "Take this, for what was already on the meter, and get yourself breakfast on me."

She didn't reach for the money. "I don't need your money. I need this car. So get the hell out."

Seriously? Judging from her big box store athletic wear, which I had to admit hugged her figure well, I couldn't believe she didn't need, or at least want, the money.

"Listen, lady, I'll come back for you," the Uber driver said.

Her head snapped to face the driver. "I'll deal with you in a minute."

I wanted to be contrite, even though I really didn't have the patience for this. "Get in the car, and I'll pay him to take you wherever you want to go after I'm done."

She folded her arms across her chest. "How about you go wherever you're going after I'm done?"

"I don't have time for this." Yes, I was in the wrong, but the driver wanted my business more than hers. Just as I was about to lean forward to tell the driver to leave, she swung the door open wide.

I stared at her. "What do you think you're doing?" 

She tried to push her way into the backseat. "I don't have time for this either!"

I refused to budge.

She attempted to push me across the seat with her little body, and when she didn't succeed, she opted to climb over me.

Her butt grazed my lap as she took the place next to me in the backseat. 

The move was insane, but it turned me on. I am a dude, after all.

Her long, light brown ponytail swayed back and forth as she panted from the effort of forcing her way into the backseat with me. If I wasn't in such a hurry, I'd think she was kind of cute. Not my regular type and possibly insane, but definitely cute.

"Take me to the Malibu Retreat Center," she instructed the driver.

"The one just up the hill?" the driver asked her.

She refused to even look in my direction. "Yes, it'll only take five minutes. Then you can take him to his Assholes Anonymous meeting or wherever he's going."

I couldn't help but smile. She worked for my father's company. Wouldn't little Miss Angry Pants be so surprised!

Buy on Amazon | Paperback

About the Author

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Are you like me?

Do you enjoy funny, contemporary romances with spicy love scenes?

Because if you do ...

You've landed in the perfect place.

I'm Tina Gabor, and it’s so much fun getting to write the books I love reading. Gorgeous men and fierce, feisty, and funny women are my jam.

And since there’s nothing like a love story with a dash of sun and fun ...

I set most of my in Southern California and Florida. I grew up in South Florida, and now I live in Southern California with my fiancee and a stray cat we named Fred.

To get special deals on new releases and updates on what your favorite book couples are doing after the story ends, go to SparksFlyRomance.com/Tina

Connect: https://www.facebook.com/tinagaborauthor/

Spotlight: A Rake Like You by Becky Michaels

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Publication Date: August 31, 2021

Mildred Press

Series: Linfield Hall, Book #2

Genre: Historical Romance/Regency

About to turn thirty, Charles Finch finally realizes his luck has run out. He’s twenty thousand pounds in debt, his entire family hates him, and the powerful Duke of Rutley is watching his every move. So Charles sets out to do what any handsome but impoverished earl would: find a young lady with an impressive dowry to marry him and replenish his coffers.

Louisa Strickland much prefers managing the successful estate her father left her to the company of society. But now that her younger sister has come of age, Louisa finds herself in Mayfair, forced to protect her family from desperate fortune hunters like her neighbor, Charles Finch. And when Charles sets his sights on Louisa’s sister, Louisa will do anything to avert his attention elsewhere.

As Charles and Louisa find themselves rekindling an old friendship that once went up in flames, Charles begins to wonder if there could be something more between them. He only needs to prove he’s not the man he once was. But unfortunately for Charles, it will take much more than passionate kisses and giving up brandy to convince independent Louisa to marry a rake like him.

Excerpt

Chapter Nine

Charles walked swiftly down the street toward the coffeehouse where the duke was drinking that evening, Louisa’s list in hand, still smiling over some of the little things she said that afternoon. From her horror over Hayward sending her flowers to the way she crossed out names she thought might be unsuitable for him, Louisa was just the way he remembered her. Despite her somewhat hard exterior, Louisa was still the same sweet, innocent girl he knew seven years ago. Looking at the list, he wondered if she even realized she was looking out for him like a friend might—like the friends they used to be.

When he reached the coffeehouse, Charles immediately looked for Rutley, hoping the duke wasn’t too far into his cups already. Charles didn’t plan on staying for long, and their conversation would be much easier if Rutley were at least somewhat sober. Charles found the man sitting at a small table by himself, nursing a glass of brandy and looking as dark and broody as ever.

They had not spoken in a while, not since the morning after Charles’s dinner party with his family. Although Charles apologized for not telling Rutley about the party ahead of time, the duke would hear nothing of it, preferring to pretend it hadn’t happened at all. After all, Rutley was the one who had shown up at Finch Place acting like a drunken fool. He only had himself to blame for Rosamund’s increasingly low opinion of him.

“If it makes you feel any better, she still thinks no more highly of me,” Charles begrudgingly told him at the time. Not much had changed since then. Even after attending the Talbot ball and behaving admirably, Rosamund still wasn’t impressed with her brother. She would probably be even less impressed if she knew Charles was sitting down with the duke that evening, but Charles didn’t have much of a choice when he owed Rutley so much money.

The duke seemed to have his wits about him because he shot Charles a suspicious look, knowing he did not come to places like this anymore. “Charles,” he said, leaning back in his chair and finishing his drink in one gulp. He placed the empty glass on the table, and Charles looked at it, feeling envious for a brief moment. “What brings you here? Shouldn’t you be at a ball or dinner party wooing a certain young lady?”

Instead of answering him, Charles sat down and placed the list that Louisa and his sisters had drawn up for him on the table. Rutley looked down at it, confused, just as one of the serving girls dropped another brandy on their table. She turned to Charles, waiting for him to order something, but the earl only shook his head. Looking around the coffeehouse, he knew he wasn’t wholly immune to the temptations of his old life. He wondered if he knew any of the blokes playing cards in one of the secret back rooms.

“What is this?” the duke asked. He picked up the list, turning it over as he waited for Charles’s response.

“A list of eligible heiresses other than Flora Strickland,” Charles said.

Rutley appeared confused. “Why are some of the names crossed out?”

Charles hesitated. “Miss Strickland didn’t think they were as suitable as the others,” he said, not wishing to mention Rosamund’s name. The earl never knew how it might set Rutley off when he did. Nevertheless, the duke’s eyebrows shot upwards.

“Miss Strickland?” he asked incredulously. “As in Miss Louisa Strickland? This was her idea, wasn’t it?”

After a moment of hesitation, Charles nodded. The duke appeared dismayed by the discovery. “She still doesn’t want me courting her sister, so she presented a list of alternatives. Do you know any of them?”

Rutley furrowed his brow, reaching inside his jacket as he did so and procuring a pair of spectacles. He gingerly placed them on the bridge of his nose after putting the list back down on the table. When he picked it up again, Rutley peered at it carefully.

“I have heard of some of their fathers,” the duke said as his eyes scanned the list. “They have generous dowries, no doubt. Any one of them would be more than suitable for your needs.”

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

About the Author

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Becky Michaels is a historical romance author and self-proclaimed Anglophile. After graduating from Boston University with a degree in English, she reluctantly decided to get a day job but never stopped writing—or dreaming. THE LAND STEWARD’S DAUGHTER, a Regency romance set in 1815 England, is her debut novel. Despite the cold winters and high rent, she still lives in the Boston area with her boyfriend and cat.

WEBSITE | FACEBOOK | TWITTER | BOOKBUB | GOODREADS

Spotlight: A Season to Remember by Rebecca Heflin

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Seasons of Northridge, Book 3

Contemporary Romance

Release Date: September 9, 2021

With her would-be groom and former business partner arrested and her once-successful California real estate business in shambles, good girl Georgia MacKinnon plans to return to her hometown of Northridge. But before her return, she goes on what would have been her honeymoon and spends one wild, impulsive weekend in Las Vegas.

​Enter bad boy Liam Dunbar, a convicted computer hacker turned wealthy entrepreneur who is trying to outrun his past. In Vegas for a friend’s wedding, Liam comes to the rescue of a beautiful woman in a nightclub. Troubled by the sadness behind her eyes, he vows to fulfill her every fantasy, if only for the weekend.

​​But all good things must come to an end. Mortified by her sordid weekend fling, Georgia does what any self-respecting good girl suffering from Sunday-morning regret does—she runs. No one needs to know. It is Las Vegas, after all . . .

​When business brings Liam to Northridge, Georgia’s impulsive behavior comes back to haunt her. Concerned about her hometown good girl reputation, she persuades Liam to keep their fling a secret. Unfortunately, what happens in Vegas doesn't always stay in Vegas.

Buy on Amazon Kindle | Paperback

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About the Author

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Rebecca Heflin is a bestselling, award-winning author who has dreamed of writing romantic fiction since she was fifteen and her older sister sneaked a copy of Kathleen Woodiwiss' Shanna to her and told her to read it. Rebecca writes women's fiction and contemporary romance. When not passionately pursuing her dream, Rebecca is busy with her day-job at a large state university.

Rebecca is a member of Romance Writers of America (RWA), Florida Romance Writers, and Florida Writers Association. She and her mountain-climbing husband live at sea level in sunny Florida.

Connect:

Website: http://www.rebeccaheflin.com

Twitter: https://twitter.com/RebeccaHeflin

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Spotlight: The Dark Queen by M. Dalto

(The Empire Saga #4)

Genres: Fantasy, New Adult

Synopsis:

For fans of Elise Kova, Sarah J. Maas, and Holly Black.

For centuries, the Empire has been enslaved to an infallible, revered Prophecy—one that controlled every thought and action, banished those who questioned its integrity, and promised to bring peace and tranquility to those who followed blindly and believed unconditionally.

But the Prophecy is flawed.

Amid broken promises and mournful lamentations, fates are changed, and dreams are destroyed.

When an ancient force resurfaces and threatens to destroy all they know, new alliances are formed as the heirs to the Empire’s throne struggle to put aside personal differences for the good of their realm.

Before it’s too late.

The Empire Saga is best enjoyed in this order:

1. Two Thousand Years

2. Mark of the Empress

3. Beginning’s End

4. The Dark Queen

Excerpt

Prologue

Welcome back, Empress.

Alexstrayna felt cold.

It wasn’t like when she had been outside for too long without an overcoat or a cape. Or as if she were caught out in the rain without an umbrella and the chill of the evening air had penetrated through her clothes until it reached her bones.

No, it was the feeling of waking up in the middle of the night after a nightmare, body slick with sweat and heart racing.

This was the chill of fear.

Wherever she was, it was dark. She sensed the cool smoothness of stone around her, yet when she cast her arms out she couldn’t feel any walls. From the smell of damp rock, however, she knew they were there.

And they were cold.

It was paralyzing. Instead of running, or trying to find a way out, she wrapped her arms around herself as if to retain whatever last bit of inner warmth she possessed. Huddled within those biting, stone confines, she tried to keep her teeth from chattering and her body from seizing.

Where was she? And how did she get there in the first place?

She had just watched the others pack and head off on their trek to the Borderlands. She and Jamison had stayed behind, and as they were returning to the palace…

Crystal.

She had approached them with no limp, no hobble, no sign of any outward injuries. In fact, the way she had snuck up on Alex in the palace gardens, catching her completely unaware, it was as though she hadn’t been in the infirmary just moments before, allegedly healing from wounds inflicted upon her by Lexan.

She remembered seeing Jamison in the distance, sprawled on the ground, immobile. And that man…

She had never met him before, but those eyes—they bore into her soul as if she should have recognized him.

A sob choked in her throat as her head throbbed with pain.

Mom!

Despite the ache, Alex’s head whipped upward, and she stared desperately into the gloom. Sarayna? What was she doing there?

She tried to gather her legs beneath her, but they felt like lead. The pounding in her head—it was getting worse. Alex had to warn her daughter and maybe Sarayna could at least escape whatever this was, could tell Reylor and Treyan…

“Alexstrayna.”

Her name echoed off the stones as if someone were there with her, watching her all along.

“Who’s there?” she rasped; her throat was raw as if she had been screaming. Had she? She couldn’t remember anything since her path crossed Crystal’s in the gardens.

A smooth, feminine chuckle resounded around her. “Oh, we are going to have a fine time together, you and I.”

“Who are you?” Alex demanded, her voice growing louder. She finally regained her footing and pushed herself up into a standing position.

The pain within Alex’s skull was almost unbearable, but her eyes began to adjust slowly, taking in what was, indeed, a room. The moss-covered walls confirmed the smell of dampness and the sound of trickling water could be heard. There was a brightening light above, shining through the darkness from a window. It was as if the suns were rising on a new day—like a dawning ray of hope that she was going to escape this hell. Wherever it was.

Although every muscle in her body was tense, as if the frigid air was eating away at her from the inside out, she started toward the light.

And that voice remained all around her.

Laughing.

“Until we meet again, Empress,” it said, just as that light exploded within the room.

For a moment, illuminated by the flash, Alex swore she saw a throne—a black marble chaise carved into the wall. Upon that throne was a female clad in black.

A woman wearing her face.

Before she could take a step closer to investigate, that light exploded not only in that dark room, but also inside her head. The brightness intermingled with the pain that had been building between her eyes, bursting like a million pins and needles through every pore of her body.

Everything went dark as Alex screamed.

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About the Author

M. Dalto is a bestselling New Adult author of adventurous romantic fantasy stories, having won a Watty award for excellence in digital storytelling for her debut novel, Two Thousand Years, in 2016. She spends her days as a full-time residential real estate paralegal, using her evenings to pursue her literary agenda, and when she’s not writing, she enjoys reading fantasy novels, playing video games, and drinking coffee. She currently lives in Massachusetts with her husband, their daughter, and their corgi named Loki.

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