Tag: read
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Scoring The Player’s Baby- Naima Simone

The blurb:after a divorce from her cheating football player ex, PR whiz Kim Matlock would rather drive a pine tree through her walled-off heart than work at the Seattle Wedding Expo. And the last thing she expects is to be grabbed and kissed breathless by a hot giant of a man looking to fend off…
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THE ART OF SCANDAL – REGINA BLACK

I read quite a bit in 2023 but hardly ever got round to blogging about it, because life as they say, be lifing, but I could not let the year fade to black without talking about the best book I read all year. My top five of all time. Art of Scandal by Regina Black.…
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MILE HIGH-LIZ TOMFORDE

There’s a lot of noise being made about Hockey Romance, a sub-sect of the romance community, and not the good kind of noise, because some people got carried away. There always has to be that group that ruins it for everyone, innit, and now look; we are all being tarred with the same dirt. Not…
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THE DEVIL OF DOWNTOWN- JOANNA SHUPE

Talk to me nasty like Jack Mulligan or not at all… My favourite ever trope is bad boy // good girl. When the bad boy has to redeem his ways a little to get the good girl, he did not know he needed. When he discovers he loves her, has feelings, feels feelings and cannot…
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SUMMER ROMANCE

Sooooo… I have a bone to pick, and I am in a fighting mood. Who are you people who turn your noses up at romance novels and beach reads? Who are you heathens that think because one is not talking about blowing stuff up or spies or gore or a dog, God help me, it…
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NEVER SEDUCE A SCOT – Maya Banks

I’ve long been a fan of historical romance novels because the sexy quotient is off the chains HOT. Yes, there’s issues with it, but I am here only for the fantasy and romance sometimes we just need a vice to keep us going and historical romances are a vice to a degree. You come without…
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VINTAGE POSTCARDS FROM THE AFRICAN WORLD- JESSICA B. HARRIS

A coffee table book for the ages, one you will read and gift to friends who come to your home. One that will be a talking point at the dinner table because this book is simply divine. It shows Africa in her delight, through the work and play of her people. Of us. It shows…


