Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.Du kan altid afmelde dig igen.
A heartwarming return to Heron Lake, Winter Games is book four in the scorchingly hot romantic comedy series, Playing to Win, taking place just a few months after Playing House. With Abe and Violet's engagement uniting the Fowler and O'Sullivan families, Kate and Sully and Nic and Will are coming home for the holidays to new dynamics they didn't exactly anticipate. Starting with Violet's plot to host them all under her own roof in the lead-up to Christmas Eve in order to give her new sister-in-law Nicole the pagan Solstice celebration she deserves.But big holidays are never easy: Will and Violet's dad is still holding a grudge against Nicole for stealing his son away from Fowler's and their mom is strong-arming Violet over where she spends Christmas going forward; Will isn't quite sure how to feel about his sister's sudden engagement to his best friend's big brother after missing the entire lead-up of their whirlwind romance and is starting to regret his big cross-country move; and nearly four years into their marriage with no plans for grandchildren, Kate still struggles to feel like she belongs among the close-knit O'Sullivans-especially now that Violet's marrying in-even while Abe faces the limitations of his injury and what that means for his participation in family events. One thing's for sure: there's no shortage of emotional overwhelm to go around this holiday season, but if Violet has anything to say about it, there's going to be even more love. Fans of Christina Lauren's In a Holidaze and Wild Nights series will love this sexy warm hug of a holiday reunion, bringing all three Playing to Win couples together again!
When it comes to love, you can't win if you don't play. Nicole Williams doesn't have time for a relationship. She's in grad school, fighting with her thesis and second-guessing her masters program choice. But that doesn't mean she isn't interested in a one-night stand-and despite being her name twin, William Nicholas Fowler seems like a guy who knows how to get the job done. When their surprise hook-up takes a turn to the date-like, Will realizes a one-night stand isn't enough. Not with the only person he's ever been comfortable being honestly himself. So he makes her an offer: instead of never repeating what was a sexplosive event for both of them, maybe they could give being friends with benefits a shot? Nicole agrees only because they live ninety miles apart, until she realizes that for Will, she's a lifeline-the only purely selfish choice he's made. From the family restaurant that ties him to a small-town future he doesn't want, to the fake relationship he keeps forgetting to bring up, he's too busy being what everyone else expects to make time for what he needs. That isn't the kind of drama she signed up for, and neither are the feelings she's started to catch. And unless Nicole figures out where she's going to land her own life, their fledgling romance might never leave the nest. The second book in the Playing to Win series, Playing it Safe is a scandalously hot millennial rom com perfect for fans of Christina Lauren's Wild Nights with some Natalie Portman/Ashton Kutcher No Strings Attached vibes.
When you bet on love, the house always wins. All Violet has ever wanted is to run her family's barbecue restaurant, the locally famous Fowler's. Now, with her parents away on a long overdue vacation, and her brother living his own dreams elsewhere, it's time to prove she has what it takes to keep her family's legacy alive. But left alone with her fears of failure, she might be starting to buckle under the pressure. When Abraham O'Sullivan lands at Fowler's on his way back home, his dreams of playing professional hockey shattered by injury, a driven, delightful, and all grown-up Violet makes him an offer he can't refuse: instead of the move back in with his parents and the I told you so he's dreading, he can house-sit with her while he figures out his next step-staring down a post-hockey future that's arrived well before he'd formed any kind of plan. Once she starts playing house with Sex-God O'Sullivan, it doesn't take long before the overstressed Violet's focus fractures. With Abe, for the first time ever, she's found something she wants as much as Fowler's, and those mutual feelings are a threat to everything they've both worked toward with single-minded drive. They'll each have to decide if being together is worth giving up the greatest loves of their lives. For fans of Christina Lauren's Wild Nights and Cora Carmack's Rusk University series, PLAYING HOUSE is the third book in the all new, scorchingly hot romantic comedy Playing to Win series from the author of Daughter of a Thousand Years and From Asgard, With Love, Amalia Dillin/Carosella.
Tilmeld dig nyhedsbrevet og få gode tilbud og inspiration til din næste læsning.
Ved tilmelding accepterer du vores persondatapolitik.