Tools of Engagement is every bit as fun and sexy as Tessa Bailey’s fans have come to expect.
By Tessa Bailey
Tools of Engagement is every bit as fun and sexy as Tessa Bailey's fans have come to expect.
Tools of Engagement is every bit as fun and sexy as Tessa Bailey’s fans have come to expect.
This exploration of identity, love and loss in the context of an interracial relationship feels authentic and bittersweet, yet hopeful all the same.
Ripper captures all the awkwardness of first dates in a wry first-person voice, and readers’ hearts will ache for Dec and Sidney.
A series of unfortunate events lead to a meet-disaster in Julia London’s affecting and ebullient romantic comedy.
Holiday writes beautiful prose, and while this story is incredibly emotional, she leavens it with quirky secondary characters and generous helpings of humor.
The love scenes in this series starter are what romance writers dream of—arresting and affecting, sensual explorations of a deep emotional connection.
There are no real cowboys in this story, just a well-crafted cocktail of romantic comedy and suspense in a struggling Texas town.
This love story is dramatic but it’s also sweet and complex, as layered and grounded as the characters themselves.
This charming small-town drama is as smooth and sweet as a Louisiana drawl, with a good-guy hero who more than deserves his happily ever after.
Ione Butler does a wonderful job narrating Dani’s brash quirkiness and Zaf’s lovestruck sweetness.
This friends-to-lovers contemporary romance is sexy, addictive and deliciously dramatic.
This romance is slow building, but the journey is a delight.
The best way to capture the magic of Boyfriend Material is to think of it as a literary, millennial version of a 1930s screwball comedy.
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