![]() Since Macy is still living with her fiance while grappling with her feelings for Elliot, the flashbacks offer steamy moments, tender revelations, and sweetly awkward confessions while Macy makes peace with her past and decides her future. She throws herself into her work and rarely comes up for air, not even to plan her upcoming wedding. In the present day, Macy’s father is dead as well. After losing her mother at a young age, Macy is navigating her teenage years without a female role model, relying on the time-stamped notes her mother left in her father’s care for guidance. And as a teen, Macy has more to worry about than which girl Elliot is taking to the prom. But a chance encounter forces her to confront the truth: what happened to make Macy stop speaking to Elliot? Ultimately, they’re separated not by time or physical remoteness but by emotional distance-Elliot and Macy always kept their relationship casual because they went to different schools. In the second, Macy is working as a doctor and engaged to a single father, and she hasn’t spoken to Elliot since their breakup. In the first, Macy Sorensen meets and falls in love with the boy next door, Elliot Petropoulos, in the closet of her dad’s vacation home, where they hide out to discuss their favorite books. Toggling between past and present, two love stories unfold simultaneously. But he doesn’t know why she never forgave him. Romance will never die as long as the megaselling Roberts keeps writing it.Įleven years ago, he broke her heart. Original characterization, brisk pace, and a great feel for the grandeur of the setting-not to mention a fabulously tough young heroine who puts her vapid chick-lit sisters to shame-add up to a wonderful read. And when Patrick Galloway’s frozen corpse is found in an ice cave with an ax through the chest-and it’s clear that the long-ago killer is still on the loose-all hell breaks loose in Lunacy. But she’s hiding her own heartbreak: her ne’er-do-well, adventurous father disappeared 16 years ago during a dangerous climb. She’s a bush pilot, lives alone and likes it, takes her pleasure where she finds it-and rolling around with Nate is a very pleasurable experience indeed. Just so happens that Charlene’s daughter is a knockout: beautiful, athletic, black-haired Meg has ice-blue eyes that can undress a man in a flash. Nate’s got a lot on his mind: between the death of his partner at the Baltimore PD, who left a grieving widow and three kids, and a divorce Nate didn’t want, he’s emotionally numb. Peach, the motherly town gossip, warned him about the brassy boardinghouse owner in no uncertain terms. A newcomer like Nate gets a lot of attention, but does he ever wish that Charlene, hip-swinging, heavily made-up, middle-aged mantrap, would leave him alone. The locals? They call themselves the Lunatics, of course: back-to-nature survivalists, native Inuit, former hippies, and oddballs of every stripe. Nate Burke, the new chief of police in the little town of Lunacy, had a few qualms about living in the moose-infested end of nowhere, but there’s something about the place-a man can breathe, if he doesn’t mind having icicles for a mustache. 601) doesn’t miss in this wild and woolly tale of love and murder in Alaska. The Queen of Romance has you in her sights.Īmazingly, Roberts (a.k.a.
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