Review & Giveaway: Last First Kiss by Lia Riley
Last
First Kiss
Brightwater Series Book #1
Brightwater Series Book #1
By:
Lia Riley
Releasing
June 23rd, 2015
Avon
Romance
Blurb
New
to Avon, author Lia Riley makes a splash with her first sexy,
hilarious book in the sizzling Brightwater series!
A
kiss is just the beginning…
Pinterest
Perfect. Or so Annie Carson’s life appears on her popular blog.
Reality is... messier. Especially when it lands her back in one-cow
town, Brightwater, California, and back in the path of the gorgeous
six-foot-four reason she left. Sawyer Kane may fill out those
wranglers, but she won’t be distracted from her task. Annie just
needs the summer to spruce up and sell her family’s farm so she and
her young son can start a new life in the big city. Simple, easy,
perfect.
Sawyer
has always regretted letting the first girl he loved slip away. He
won’t make the same mistake twice, but can he convince beautiful,
wary Annie to trust her heart again when she’s been given every
reason not to? And as a single kiss turns to so much more, can Annie
give up her idea of perfect for a forever that’s blissfully real.
Excerpt
The
next knock rattled the front door’s hinges; whoever was out there
meant business. Annie
sneezed before drawing a shaky breath. Drinking wasn’t a personal
forte, but chamomile tea didn’t do much to blunt the
first-night-back-in-my-one-cow-hometown blues, even with extra honey.
Maybe
if she took her time, whoever was out there would go away.
She
closed her laptop’s lid, stood, and walked to the sink, setting the
tumbler under the leaky tap. Water drip, drip, dripped into the brown
dregs. Dad’s radio above the fridge, tuned to a Fresno classical
station, piped in Mozart’s requiem on the scratchy speakers,
hopefully due to coincidence rather than cosmic foreshadowing.
More
knocking.
This
could very well be an innocent mistake. Someone had confused
directions, taken a wrong turn, driven up a quarter-mile driveway to
an out-of-the-way farmhouse . . . to where she sat wearing a Kiss
Me, I’m Scottish
apron with a sleeping five-year-old upstairs.
She
hadn’t missed Gregor in months. Her ex-husband might be a
metrosexual philosophy professor, but at least he stood higher than
five feet in socks. Why, oh, why had she enrolled in yoga instead of
kickboxing last summer in Portland? No way would a sun salutation cut
the mustard against a crazy-eyed bunny boiler. An alarmed buzz
replaced the hollow feeling in her chest. Brightwater was a sleepy,
safe backwater. Had it grown more dangerous since she tore out of
here on her eighteenth birthday? Meth labs? Cattle thieves? Area 51
wasn’t too far away, so throw in possible alien abduction?
Well,
she was alone now and would have to deal with whatever came.
As
a rule, killers and extraterrestrials didn’t announce themselves at
the front door. Still, this was no time to start taking chances. She
grabbed her father’s single-malt by the neck and padded into the
living room. The change from bright kitchen to gloom skewed her
vision as blood shunted to her legs. Shadows clung to the beamed
ceiling and brick fireplace. If the rocking chair in the corner
moved, she’d pee her pants. That old gooseneck rocker starred in
more than a few of her childhood nightmares—ever since her sister
had mentioned that Great-Grandma Carson had died in it.
“Hello?”
she called, her voice calm—but, darn, an octave too high. “Who’s
there?”
Silence.
The
door didn’t have a peephole. This was the Eastern Sierras, a place
where shopkeepers left signs taped to their unlocked front doors
saying “Went to the bank, back in five minutes.”
Think!
Think! What’s
the game plan?
Retreat—not
a choice. But more whisky was definitely a viable option. She opened
the bottle, and the gulp seared her throat. At least the burn helped
dissipate the cold fear knotting her stomach. She pressed her lips
together while screwing the cap back on. Here
goes nothing.
Brandishing the bottle like a club, she flung open the door.
A
light breeze blew across her face, cool despite the fact it was early
July. Five Diamonds Farm sat at four thousand feet in elevation. She
glanced around the porch. Empty. Unable to stand the suspense, she
stepped forward, her bare toes grazing warm ceramic. A baking dish
sat on the mat. Annie knit her brow and crouched—a neighborly
casserole delivery? At this hour? Fat chance, but one could hope. She
removed the lid, and an invisible fist squeezed her sternum.
If
hope was a thing with feathers, all she had was chicken potpie.
Literally.
A
toothpick anchored a Post-it note to the crust.
Caught
your hen in my tomatoes.
Chicken
#2 will be nuggets.
Author Info
Lia
Riley writes
offbeat New Adult and Contemporary Adult romance. After studying at
the University of Montana-Missoula, she scoured the world armed only
with a backpack, overconfidence and a terrible sense of direction.
She counts shooting vodka with a Ukranian mechanic in Antarctica,
sipping yerba mate with gauchos in Chile and swilling XXXX with
stationhands in Outback Australia among her accomplishments.
A
British literature fanatic at heart, Lia considers Mr. Darcy and
Edward Rochester as her fictional boyfriends. Her very patient
husband doesn't mind. Much. When not torturing heroes (because c'mon,
who doesn't love a good tortured hero?), Lia herds unruly chickens,
camps, beach combs, daydreams about future books, wades through a
mile-high TBR pile and schemes yet another trip. Right now, Icelandic
hot springs and Scottish castles sound mighty fine.
My Thoughts...
I can't tell you how much I have to say about this book! I guess I can tell you since I'm sitting here writing this blog post. Let me put it this way instead, did you every have so much you wanted say that you can't put it into words? No? Yes? Well either way I'm going to try my best.
Let's start at the title, I have to admit I didn't like it at first. It didn't roll off the tongue well. Then at some point I got it and it felt right. Now that I have that off my chest I have to tell you the part I loved the most and I'm not sure why. It's kind of sick. If you look at the excerpt above you will see it at the end. When she finds the chicken pot pie with the note I don't know, I just lost it. I know, I'm a sick person, remember I already mentioned it!
I will say that some of the characters I loved like Annie and Sawyer and Annie's son. I can't say the same for some of the other town people. Some of them sucked. They acted like children. They need to grow up and stop calling names. But there were others that I really liked. And one I liked when you would think I wouldn't. Try guessing who? Oops, you'll have to read it to do so.
As a whole the story was very good. I enjoyed it and thought it was well-written. I liked it enough that I will try the next book in the series which is Right Wrong Guy..see what I mean about the titles? I can't wait to see when this one make sense to me. It's out on August 4th at a real great price. It's about Sawyers brother, Archer. You've got the love the brothers names. The other brother is called Wilder. I mean, come on...sex on a stick!
To concealed, I know your tried of reading what I have to say and want to go order Last First Kiss but bare with me. Even though the book had a few negatives, at least to me, I really enjoyed Annie and Sawyers story and felt it's so worth the read. Now I'm done, well almost.
I would love to hear what you thought about Last First Kiss, for those who haven't yet read it...what are you waiting for? Done now, happy reading!
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Thank you for hosting LAST FIRST KISS!
ReplyDeleteYou are so welcome!
DeleteOMG! That chicken pot pie scene is too freaking hilarious! And I could totally see that happening....lol....Thanks for the review (it was good) and for the giveaway:)
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind words. I love the scene, it's just a shocking laugh out loud type of moment. Thanks for stopping by!
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