Rave reviews for New York Times bestselling author
Susan Mallery
Praise for Sweet Spot
âMallery is in top-notch form as she takes troubled and stubborn individuals and portrays their emotional growth. Drama and trauma abound in this winner!â
âRomantic Times BOOKreviews
âI strongly recommend Sweet Spot, especially to readers who like their family melodramas spiked with lots of laughter and hot romance.â
âThe Romance Reader
Praise for Sweet Talk
âSweet Talk is one sweet read! Susan Mallery delivers a deliciously satisfying first book in her new wonderfully written Bakery Sisters trilogy.â
âThe Romance Readers Connection (4 1/2 stars)
âAmusing, heartfelt and wildly romantic, Sweet Talk is the perfect romance.â
âJoyfully Reviewed
âSusan Mallery provides a powerful passionate backdrop to a fine contemporary romance.â
âHarriet Klausner
Praise for Accidentally Yours
âMallery has once again proven to be a superb writer; romance novels just donât get much better than this.â
âBooklist
âIf youâre looking for heart-tugging emotions elaborately laced with humor, then Mallery is the author for you.â
âRomantic Times BOOKreviews
Praise for Tempting
âAt turns witty and poignant, this hard-to-put-down book will appeal to a broad spectrum of readers.â
âBooklist, starred review
Praise for Sizzling
â[A] tasty dishâ¦Malleryâs prose is luscious and provocative, and her characters worth following from book to book.â
âPublishers Weekly
âSizzling is simply dazzling! Youâll laugh, youâll hoot, youâll raise your eyebrows, and yes, youâll cry buckets, so have those tissues handyâ¦. Highly Recommended!â
âThe Romance Readers Connection
âIâD LIKE YOU to marry my daughter.â
Skye Titan was having enough trouble balancing a small tray with two drinks and a plate of appetizers in one hand while reaching for the study door with the other. A sudden inability to breathe only complicated the stability problem.
Thirty seconds ago she would have thought that nothing her father said could surprise her anymore. She would have been wrong.
Talk about humiliating, she thought, wondering if Jed Titanâs statement was meant to buy a son-in-law or sell a daughter. With him, she couldnât be sure.
âIzzy?â the other man asked, his voice clearly audible, despite the thick door between them.
âNo. Skye.â
âOh.â
Skye waited impatiently.
âOh?â Was that the best he could do? Annoyance grew as time ticked on.
âI guess that would work, too,â the other voice said at last.
Skye practically growled in irritation. Words to make her heart beat faster for sure. So charming. How was she going to keep from throwing herself at T. J. Boone when she walked into the study?
If she had been any less the well-trained hostess, not to mention a dutiful daughter, she would have pushed open the door, tossed the drinks in both their faces and left the house, never to be heard from again.
âEgotistical jackass bastard,â she muttered, not sure if she meant the insult for T.J. or her father. They both deserved it.
She forced herself to breathe slowly, then imagined herself sinking into the big tub in the bathroom off her bedroom. Bubbles up to her chin, a glass of white wine to take off the edge. She was calm and in control. She was going to do the right thing, because thatâs who she was. The good girl, dammit. The one who served drinks to men like T.J. and her father.
Skye opened the door to the study and stepped inside the room. The two men stood next to the pool table. Jed didnât bother acknowledging her while T.J. looked momentarily uncomfortable. As if he wondered whether sheâd heard him condemn her with faint praise.
She smiled as she offered the successful businessman his drink, wishing sheâd thought to spit in it first.
âT.J.,â she said.
âSkye.â
He was good-looking, in a blond, blue-eyed sort of way. Tall and well dressed. He was a Texas boy and was probably charming, but it was hard to notice when the unenthusiastic âI guess that would work, tooâ was bouncing around in her brain.
She set the appetizers on the table in the corner. âIs there anything else, Daddy?â she asked.
âThatâs all, Skye.â
âThen Iâll say good-night.â
Her hostess duties completed, her temper still firing, albeit silently, she left the room and walked to the stairs. Once on the third floor, she made her way to the last room on the left. During the day, it was a bright open space done in primary colors. A big bed sat by the window overlooking the main pasture. At night, shadows closed in, but seven-year-old Erin was never afraid of the dark. She wasnât afraid of anything. A quality she must have inherited from her father, Skye thought enviously.