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On the night of their senior homecoming football game, Adam Cohen finally tells his best friend, Baker Johnson, that he’s in love with him. Devastating Adam, Baker denies being gay and abruptly ends their friendship. Unbeknownst to Adam, Baker is equally distraught and unable to explain that it’s only an act. Fifteen years later, they are forced to share a room on a cruise ship during their week-long high school reunion trip. Baker finally explains the misunderstanding and is desperate to rekindle their relationship, but Adam fears having his heart broken twice by the love of his life.
For the first time in years, socially awkward Jake Moran finds himself crushing on another man. Not just any man. Tall, muscular, intelligent Drew Harris. Jake is consumed by thoughts of Drew. It’s distracting. So much that Jake’s grades are suffering, and he’s worried he’ll lose his perfect GPA. As Jake sees it, there is only one way he’ll be able to focus again and get his grades back on track. He must have Drew. If only Jake were charming and attractive, like Drew, instead of clumsy and quirky. Winning Drew definitely won’t be easy.
The opening chapters of this encyclopedic treatment deal with the Newberry County's formation, early settlers, soldiers, notable citizens, government institutions, and social and economic development, while later chapters are given over to biographies, cemetery inscriptions, family reminiscences and folklore. At the heart of the book is a long section devoted to genealogies of pioneer families of Newberry County.
In Plaid Nights, men in kilts are as varied as they are hot. Whether they're caber tossers, rugby players, Highland warriors, country dancers, or time-traveling vampires, they're up for surprises and sexy good times. Rob Rosen starts us off with humor in "Tossing It." Contemporary men discover love in unexpected places in "Whiskey and Want" by Megan McFerren, "Perfect Working Order" by Elizabeth Coldwell, and "Off-Kilter" by Racheline Maltese & Erin McRae. We get a taste of the paranormal in "Sir WW" by Angelique Voisen, "Feumaidh Mi Ruith (I Have to Run)" by Missouri Dalton, and "Kilt in the Closet" by Logan Zachary. And we're treated to forbidden love in historicals "Hunting for a Highlander" by Lila Mathews, "A Time to Heal" by Anna Mansel, and "As Fair Art Thou, My Bonny Lad" by McKay. In these stories, some tartan-clad men wear their kilts in the "traditional manner," while others are less daring. But all find love, and of course, a happy ending—especially at night, when the plaid comes off.
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Vols. for 1950/55- are a "compilation of unaltered geologic papers from Shale Shaker," v. 1/5-