![]() All other NFL-related trademarks are trademarks of the National Football League. Genres RomanceSports RomanceHockeySportsCollegeNew AdultContemporary. It's recommended to read the series in order. This is book two of the Mendell Hawks series. ![]() ![]() ![]() NFL and the NFL shield design are registered trademarks of the National Football League.The team names, logos and uniform designs are registered trademarks of the teams indicated. Team Players is a college hockey romance starring two cocky and competitive hockey captains. Team Players AderynResident playboy, Samson Morgan, thinks he can beat me at my own game.The hockey captain truly believes he can stop playing the field for longer than I can start having one-night stands.Okay, sure, historically Im known for being an all-in, ask-to-be-your-girlfriend-on-the-first-date romantic. ![]()
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![]() ![]() With Espen’s life at stake, Sylvi must conspire to save them both. ![]() When she suggests the two of them marry to thwart her father’s plans, Espen cannot deny her request.Īs they search for the holy lamp, Lord Prestegard pursues them, intent on reclaiming his daughter. In addition to his royal quest, he’s determined to protect Sylvi, the woman he’s always secretly loved. ![]() She turns to her childhood friend Espen, a Knight of Brethren, counting on his loyalty and kindness to help her escape.Įspen has been given an urgent mission to locate the holy lamp, an ancient relic necessary to defeat the enemy invading their country. When Sylvi Prestegard discovers that her father has arranged for her to marry a wealthy nobleman known for his thieving ways, she’s desperate to avoid the union. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I'd especially like to thank Jeanne Cavelos for her always enthusiastic support. Thanks to the Odfellows, Odyssey Fantasy Writing Workshop graduates, especially the Naked Squirrels, and to the WACO writing group (Michael Bateman, Barry Fishler, Karen Fishler, Brian Hiebert, and James Van Pelt), most of whom have had to deal with Kitty in her various incarnations. Thanks to my housemates when I was writing this: Joe "Max" Campanella, for the radio and music insights, the advice, the high fives, and the shoulder and Yaz Ostrowski for beta testing, and for the immortal words, "Don't make me hungry. ![]() Many thanks to Paula Balafas of the Wheatridge Police Department, for checking the police stuff, and for being a stalwart literary partner in crime at CU. ![]() ![]() Having survived the plague that took so many of his friends and lovers, Michael has learned to embrace the random pleasures of life, the tender alliances that sustain him in the hardest of times, Michael Tolliver Lives follows its protagonist as he finds love with a younger man, attends to his dying fundamentalist mother in Florida, and finally reaffirms his allegiance to a wise octogenarian who was once his landlady. Now, almost twenty years after ending his groundbreaking saga of San Francisco life, Maupin revisits his all-too-human hero, letting the 55-year-old gardener tell his story in his own voice. Michael Tolliver, the sweet-spirited Southerner in Armistead Maupin's classic Tales of the City series, is arguably the most beloved gay character in fiction. ![]() ![]() ![]() And Kate, their new lodger, is the perfect roommate-and not just because her rent payments will give them the income they need to start trying for the baby of their dreams.Įxcept-no one is truly perfect. I can’t say that complaint A really applied to Magpie, but complaint B did make an appearance.īut, let’s start from the start. that formula always, always, always seems to involve either a high or really high degree of gaslighting targeting women which sometimes makes me more than a little uncomfortable. ![]() after a while they become a little formulaic and B. The problems with the genre as a whole for me are that A. ![]() I thought Then She Was Gone and I See You were really good and The Girl on the Train still haunts me. Don’t get me wrong, I have read some really great books that would be similarly labeled. We’ll call it female psychological thrillers. It definitely falls into a category that isn’t my usual go to. Something about Magpie by Elizabeth Day really appealed to me. ![]() |