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Is it possible to find love in a place that has only hurt you?When Gretchen Stephens inherits an old farmhouse from the grandmother she barely knew, she has one practical option: sell it. After all, there's no sentiment beyond a few fuzzy memories and no money without a sale.Her resolve only solidifies when the hot handyman, Jackson, shows up to help haul off the old refrigerator. Because even if she could make the old farmhouse into the fancy event venue of her dreams-and she won't say the idea hasn't crossed her mind a time or two-the last thing she needs is some country boy to trap her in her past, and the last thing she wants is to leave the city she loves to go back to the hills of Kentucky.However, when disaster strikes one snowy night and she and Jackson have to work together to help a boy survive, Gretchen realizes she might have misjudged Jackson. And maybe the whole town.But is it too late to let the very place that wounded her finally start to heal her?
Their case may be getting cold, but their feelings for each other are just warming up. When Macie Greene gets a job in the office at the police station, she never expects to be put on a case due to her hyper-observant eyes and ears. After all, she's just a receptionist. But when she solves a case no one else can, she soon finds herself with a new job, and a new partner-the gorgeous, but standoffish, Tad Simmons. Tad isn't thrilled to have his solo gig interrupted by the new hire. He's spent his entire life trying to prove that, despite his partial blindness, he's better than anybody else at this game. Macie's involvement threatens the careful career he's built for himself. Not only that, but with her weird humor and self-effacing genius, she might even threaten the safe spaces he's built around his heart. However, when they both agree that a murder-suicide isn't what it seems, they're stuck working together. Trying to find enough proof of a murder-murder before the flicker of feelings between them gets too hot, or the case goes completely cold. And all they've got for witnesses are a few nasty relatives, some boring phone messages, and a missing dog...
Despite the perks of living with her rich aunt, Ella's new life in Napper, Indiana, is pretty much tragically boring.Until Ella starts hearing strange voices.As rogue wolves begin to stalk the edges of town and a serial killer with a penchant for silver bullets draws closer, the city of Napper seems to wake up.Ella, with her new friends, Sam and Sarah, might be able to find out what the strange occurrences mean. Except that they're all being pulled in different directions by people who love them; and some who don't. Before they lose their way to the whispers they hear from the past, or the call to a future they're not sure they want to create, the friends will need to confront who they really are and figure out what's hiding in the silence of their sleepy little town.
In the land of the great red sun, dogs sing, wolves kill, humans serve, and wolf-shifters rule with magic and menace. Pietre is a human boy who has spent the last thirteen years afraid of the sunset, the Blødguard, and the wolf-shifting masters who rule his world. Wittendon is a werewolf prince who has spent the last nineteen years afraid of his father, his inability to do magic, and the upcoming tournament he's sure to lose. But when Pietre finds an orphaned pup in the woods and Wittendon is forced to arrest the boy's father soon after, both of them begin to realize that keeping the rules might be just as terrifying as breaking them. Now serf and master must learn to cut through their own prejudices and work together in order to turn their world before it turns on them. Grey Stone is a story of dogs who talk, wolves who kill, and a stone that-for better or worse-can change all that.
"In her debut memoir, Andrade tells of her years with cocaine and crystal methamphetamines-using, then selling, until all she had left of the life she wanted was a chalk outline and a pack of cigarettes. This is the story of her use and recovery, of the people who frustrated and inspired her, of the decision to leave the drug world. It is the story of her slow, often unsteady walk home." --
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