You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
"Catalogue d'oiseaux began as notes sent to poet Aaron Tucker's long-distance partner. Not initially intended for publication, the writings moved, over time, into a long, lyrical, confessional love poem. Following the couple on travels across the globe--from Berlin to the Yukon, Porto to Toronto--this poem is expansive, moving sensually through small, intimate spaces and the larger world alike. Traced through art, architecture and the cultural life of varied cities, Catalogue d'oiseaux lives between geographies and chronologies as a kaleidoscopic gathering of the many fractals that make up a couple's life. This is a stunning work; a celebration of the depth of adult love, and the elemental parts of life that make it so."--
None
Ginny Brown couldn’t believe it. After seven years of silence, the man who’d promised to marry her was back in Jubilee Junction. But he hadn’t come to claim her. Tucker had lost his faith in God, and he knew Ginny, with her rock-solid belief, was the one person who could help him. After one look at his troubled face, she couldn’t say no. She’d thought God planned for her to be Tucker’s bride, but maybe He had something else in store. Because even if Tucker returned to his faith, there was no guarantee that Tucker would ever learn to love her again…. Unless deep down, he’d never stopped.
The college experience can challenge the mind, prepare one for a career and/or, since away from parental supervision, provide an open invitation to frivolity, partying and ribald behavior. That may include the dream or, in most cases, the delusion of finding the love of one's life. Tucker's Angels provides an intimate look into the mindset of one such student, who is quickly seduced by the campus lifestyle. He soon believes he has landed in heaven on Earth: dorm mates with whom to fraternize, coeds just across the quad, three squares a day in the dining hall and a new gymnasium open into the night. Yet Tucker McKay's story is also one of discovery and transformation, until playing basketball...
[Siren Publishing: The Lynn Hagen ManLove Collection: Erotic Romance, Contemporary, Alternative, Paranormal, Shape-shifters, Werewolves, Romantic Suspense, MM, HEA] Viridian has gotten himself into a real pickle. Desperate not to lose his home, he makes a deal with what he thinks is a nice fairy. Little did Viridian know he was dealing with an unseelie, the darkest, most evil fairies there ever were. Not only did Kalan renege on their deal, but he sends a bounty hunter after Viridian. Afraid of losing his life, Viridian takes off, ending up in Fever’s Edge and getting more than he bargains for. He’s a gazelle, and the man who wants to save him is a wolf. Talk about a slippery slope. Tucker is shocked when he walks into the local diner to discover the gazelle shifter at the counter is his mate. When Viridian tells him the trouble on his heels, Tucker takes his mate home to protect him. Unfortunately, Solo is the bounty hunter after Viridian, and rumor says he always catches what he hunts. But Tucker isn’t going to let anyone take what is his. He’ll protect Viridian with his life. Lynn Hagen is a Siren-exclusive author.
When Tucker's People was published in 1943 it was praised by the New York Times for its blowtorch intensity. The idea for Tucker's People stemmed from Ira Wolfert's coverage as a reporter of the trial of James Jimmy Hines, a Tammany Hall district leader who was prosecuted by Thomas E. Dewey for letting Dutch Schultz take over the numbers game in New York. It is a penetrating, sympathetic novel of frustration and insecurity, a story of little people, many of them decent people, battling against forces they are too feeble to resist and too simple to understand, according to the Saturday Review of Literature.
Sweet Plains, Texas, wasn't so sweet to Cody, Noah, and Beau Tucker. But now the Tucker boys are men, ready to take on the questions that have haunted them since they left home. . . Cody Tucker shook the dust of his two-bit hometown off his boots ten years ago--right about the time his college sweetheart, Shelby Lynn Harris, married his so-called best friend. But when his dad dies, Cody finds himself home again and knee deep in the past. Except now his rowdy beer buddy is the sheriff, his housekeeper is a blue-ribbon chili chef, and the family ranch is in the red. The only thing that hasn't changed is Shelby Lynn. . . Shelby Lynn has gone through a lot of heartache thanks to Cody. But that's all over now. She just wants a chance to live the life she's made for herself in peace. The trouble is, the Sweet Plains chili cook off is heating up, the Ladies of Sweet are as riled as hornets, and as soon as Cody gets near, she's forgets all about peace. Cody is pure temptation--and she knows just how good it feels to give in. . . "A perfect mix of heart and heat, Adair keeps the pages turning." --New York Times bestselling author Jill Shalvis 105,000 Words