Sunny Chandler's Return: A Novel
Sunny Chandler's Return: A Novel book cover

Sunny Chandler's Return: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – November 23, 2004

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553576061
Dimensions
4.25 x 0.68 x 6.82 inches
Weight
4.5 ounces

Description

“A novelist who can’t write them fast enough.” — San Antonio Express-News “Sandra Brown proves herself top-notch.” —Associated Press From the Inside Flap Sandra Brown has won over fans and critics throughoutthe world with more than fifty New York Timesbestselling novels. Her early works were hailed byRendezvous magazine as stories with ?larger than lifeheroes and heroines [who] make you believe all thewarm, wonderful, wild things in life.? Here isthe unforgettable story of a woman who returns toher small hometown in the South?and findsthat the sins of her past are right where she left them.Never. Sunny Chandler always said she?d never goback to the tiny town where she grew up. It was justthree years ago that she was at the center of a notoriousscandal?and the good folks of Latham Green,Louisiana, made it clear they?d never let her forget it.So Sunny packed up and headed for New Orleans, andnow she wouldn?t give up city life for the world. Butwhen she?s invited to her best friend?s wedding, Sunnyhas no choice but to go home. And with her returncome the whispers?the looks?the rumors she triedto escape. It doesn?t take Sunny long to see thatLatham Green has nothing new to offer. Exceptmaybe Ty Beaumont.The moment Ty and Sunny first meet at a party, he cansee she?s no ordinary woman. With her dazzling hair,and eyes the color of gold, she?s a flesh-and-bloodfantasy?and Ty vows he?ll have her in his bed beforethe week is out. Yet even when he turns on his southerncharm, Sunny makes it clear she?s not interested.Sure, a night with Ty would be wilder than BourbonStreet at Mardi Gras. But Sunny?s not in town tobecome some good ol? boy?s latest conquest, no matterhow sexy he is. Little does she know that Tyisn?t used to taking no for an answer?and he isn?tabout to start now.Soon what began as an innocent flirtation becomesa tantalizingly slow, skillfully deliberate, andoverwhelmingly seductive pursuit that even Sunnyfinds hard to resist. But resist him she will. ForSunny is harboring an agonizing secret?the painfultruth of why she left Latham Green the way she did.What she really needs now is a friend?and that?s whenshe discovers there may be more to Ty Beaumontthan meets the eye. Despite his roguish facade, Sunnycomes to see he has a heart of gold. Still, she doesn?tknow if she can trust another person with her secretheartbreak?not even the one man who maybe able to heal it. From the Hardcover edition. Sandra Brown has won over fans and critics throughoutthe world with more than fifty New York Timesbestselling novels. Her early works were hailed byRendezvous magazine as stories with "larger than lifeheroes and heroines [who] make you believe all thewarm, wonderful, wild things in life." Here isthe unforgettable story of a woman who returns toher small hometown in the South--and findsthat the sins of her past are right where she left them. Never. Sunny Chandler always said she'd never goback to the tiny town where she grew up. It was justthree years ago that she was at the center of a notoriousscandal--and the good folks of Latham Green, Louisiana, made it clear they'd never let her forget it.So Sunny packed up and headed for New Orleans, andnow she wouldn't give up city life for the world. Butwhen she's invited to her best friend's wedding, Sunnyhas no choice but to go home. And with her returncome the whispers...the looks...the rumors she triedto escape. It doesn't take Sunny long to see thatLatham Green has nothing new to offer. Exceptmaybe Ty Beaumont.The moment Ty and Sunny first meet at a party, he cansee she's no ordinary woman. With her dazzling hair, and eyes the color of gold, she's a flesh-and-bloodfantasy--and Ty vows he'll have her in his bed beforethe week is out. Yet even when he turns on his southerncharm, Sunny makes it clear she's not interested.Sure, a night with Ty would be wilder than BourbonStreet at Mardi Gras. But Sunny's not in town tobecome some good ol' boy's latest conquest, no matterhow sexy he is. Little does she know that Tyisn'tused to taking no for an answer--and he isn'tabout to start now. Soon what began as an innocent flirtation becomesa tantalizingly slow, skillfully deliberate, andoverwhelmingly seductive pursuit that even Sunnyfinds hard to resist. But resist him she will. ForSunny is harboring an agonizing secret--the painfultruth of why she left Latham Green the way she did.What she really needs now is a friend--and that's whenshe discovers there may be more to Ty Beaumontthan meets the eye. Despite his roguish facade, Sunnycomes to see he has a heart of gold. Still, she doesn'tknow if she can trust another person with her secretheartbreak--not even the one man who maybe able to heal it. "From the Hardcover edition. Sandra Brown is the author of seventy New York Times bestsellers. There are over eighty million copies of her books in print worldwide, and her work has been translated into thirty-four languages. She lives in Texas. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. One"Who is she?""Her name is Sunny Chandler.""You know her?""Since third grade.""Really?""Might have been second grade.""So she grew up here?""Yep.""Where's she been?""All your life?"The first man frowned as he looked down at the second. "Where's she been?" he repeated sternly.The second man was properly cowed. "New Orleans." His syrupy Southern accent made the pronunciation "Nawlins." "Moved there a few years back. She's a seamstress.""A seamstress?" He never would have guessed that by looking at her."Something like that. Wanda could tell you more about what she's been doing."He had every intention of asking the other man's wife later all about this Sunny Chandler. She had aroused his curiosity. And his curiosity, like all his other appetites, never went unappeased for long.However, for the moment, he was content just to watch Sunny Chandler as she circulated among the other party guests. No longer a small-town girl, she stuck out like a sore thumb.Bad comparison, he thought. Sore thumbs were unsightly. He had yet to find a single unsightly thing about this woman."Why did she leave town?" he asked.His companion chuckled. "You'd never believe it.""Try me.""Well, it was like this." In a low voice, the man began to share the juiciest piece of gossip ever to come out of Latham Green.The subject of the not-to-be-believed tale that was being recounted across the room stifled a bored yawn. The sudden burst of laughter startled her, as it did everyone else nearby. Turning, Sunny saw two men standing by the wall of windows, which overlooked the golf course. The tall blond one was wiping tears of laughter from his eyes.Probably telling each other dirty jokes, Sunny thought with distaste. These yokels didn't know how to behave in polite company. The back room at the pool hall and this formal parlor of the country club were one and the same to them. They had no sense of decorum.The bridegroom's family had gone all out for this bash they were hosting in honor of the wedding couple. Since no expense had been spared, the chef had put his best efforts into the buffet. The decorator had depleted the stock of wholesale florists for miles around; the large salon was festooned with bouquets of colorful flowers. While the country club's budget was usually stretched to hire a local sextet for their dances, tonight's music was being provided by a jazzy dance band imported from Memphis.They weren't bad, either, Sunny thought. She caught the bandleader's roving eye and smiled up at him when they began playing a Kenny Rogers ballad. He winked at her. She winked back, then quickly turned her attention to the buffet. Keeping her head down, she concentrated on filling her plate."Sunny Chandler!"Groaning inwardly, Sunny painted on a fake smile and turned around. "Why, hello, Mrs. Morris.""Long time no see, girlie."Eloquent ol' biddy. "Yes, it's been a while.""How long?""Three years." Three years, two months, six days. Obviously not long enough for people to forget."Are you still in New Orleans?""Still there." And loving it. Loving any place that isn't Latham Green."You're looking good.""Thank you.""Very citified."The observation was intended as a dig. Sunny considered it a supreme compliment. Mrs. Morris crammed a mushroom stuffed with deviled crab into her mouth and chewed vigorously. Then, as though afraid Sunny might run off before she could ply her with more nosy questions, she asked quickly, "And your folks? How are they?""Fine, just fine." Sunny turned her back on the woman and picked up a raw oyster on the half shell--something she wouldn't have eaten in a million years even though she was now a resident of New Orleans--and set it on her plate.Mrs. Morris, however, wasn't attuned to nuances and had never heard of body language. She went on, undaunted."They're still in Jackson?""Um-huh.""They don't come back very often. But then after . . . well, you know what I mean. It's still difficult for them, I'm sure."Sunny wanted to set down her plate, leave the room, leave the town, leave the parish, just as she had three years ago. The only thing that kept her planted now in front of the melon bowl was the determination not to give anybody the satisfaction of having scared her off."Do y'all still own that cabin out on the lake?"Before Sunny could fashion a response, the honoree of the party came up to her. "Sunny, could I impose on you to help me with my hair? I feel a strategic pin slipping. Please? Excuse us, Mrs. Morris."Sunny deserted her half-filled plate of food. She hadn't wanted to eat, she'd merely wanted to keep her hands busy. "Thanks," she said under her breath as her friend linked arms with her and led her out of the formal salon and down the hall toward the powder room.Fran was laughing. "You looked as if you needed rescuing. Or maybe Mrs. Morris was the one in peril. I was afraid you were going to eat that Swedish meatball and then skewer her with the toothpick."They made certain they were alone in the powder room beneath the stairs and locked the door behind them to guarantee privacy. Sunny leaned against the door and drew an exasperated breath. "And you wonder why this is my first time back in three years. Do you blame me for staying away? She was all but frothing at the mouth, crazed with a lust to know all the titillating details of my life in the big city."Fran was sitting at the aproned vanity table repairing her lipstick. "Are there any titillating details of your life in the big city?" She cast Sunny a teasing glance in the oval, framed mirror. Sunny's icy stare only evoked another laugh."Relax, Sunny. This is Small Town, U.S.A. What else have people like Mrs. Morris got to do?""Watch the grass grow?""Right. They have to occupy themselves with each other's business. And, let's be frank, you gave them a lot of material to work with several years ago.""I wasn't trying to get their attention.""Well, you got it anyway. For all these years, they've been dying to know why you did what you did. Your parents moved away soon afterward, so they were no help in supplying an answer to the riddle. Now you show up looking like a character straight off the set of Dynasty, by all appearances unscathed by the incident. They're dying to know what prompted you to do such an unheard-of thing. Can you blame them for being curious?""Yes, I can blame them. The gossips practically drove my parents nuts with their childish curiosity. Mom and Dad couldn't go anywhere without being on the receiving end of snide looks and prying questions. Even so-called friends pestered them about it. They bowed to the pressure and left.""I thought they left because your dad got that job in Jackson.""That's the reason they gave me, but I never believed it. I was the reason they relocated. I've got to live with that, Fran." She took a lipstick from her miniclutch and dabbed her lips with it. "But thanks for the compliment about me looking like one of the women in Dynasty."Fran smiled. "Ladies around here wear either short cocktail dresses or long formals. They never heard of matinee length. All their hems are even, not raggedy like yours. No one would think of putting tangerine and violet together, but it looks sensational on you," she said, admiring Sunny's dress. It looked like the artful crisscrossing and draping of several scarves."And, my word, my word," Fran exclaimed, clapping her cheeks in theatrical horror, "have you really got two holes pierced in one ear? You're bound to be a pinko! I wouldn't be at all surprised if there were a Yankee or two in your family tree."Laughing, Sunny swatted the air inches from Fran's nose. "Be quiet! You're making me laugh, and I don't want to laugh."Fran clasped Sunny's hand warmly. "I know you didn't want to come back here, and that the only reason you did was for my wedding. I realize what a sacrifice it was, and I appreciate it.""I wouldn't have missed your wedding, Frannie. You know that. Although . . .""Although you don't understand why I want to get married again," Fran finished for her."Something like that."Sunny stared earnestly into Fran's eyes. It seemed to her that Fran was only digging a deeper rut for herself. She had had a chance to take her two children and leave this backwater town after obtaining a divorce from her first husband. But Fran had stayed, stuck out all the gossip, and was getting married again."Sunny, I love Steve. I want to marry him, have a baby with him." Fran's expression pleaded for understanding. "I thought I was in love with Ernie, but I only saw what everybody else did, a dashing football hero. Unfortunately, that was the sum total of what he was. When he couldn't be that anymore, he fell apart, turned to drinking, turned to other women. They still cheered him on instead of telling him to grow up as I, the nagging wife, did."Well, Steve's as solid as the Rock of Gibraltar. He loves me, he loves the girls. He's not as handsome as Ernie, and he hasn't got that built-like-a-brick-outhouse body, but he's a real man, not an overgrown child."Sunny patted Fran's hand. "I'm happy for you. You know that. I think the world of Steve for making you whole again. It's just that I can't imagine anybody actually choosing that kind of life. I feel lucky to have escaped it.""Only because you haven't found the right man to share it with." Fran arched her brow. "Speaking of which, I don't suppose you've seen your ex-fiance.""No, and I hope I don't." Sunny fiddled with her hair. "He and Gretchen are still married, I suppose.""Yes, but one hears things. The scuttlebutt is that--""No!" Sunny said. "I don't want to know. I won't stoop to the level of everybody else in town and yearn for the latest gossip." She looked at Fran's hairdo critically. "Your hair is perfect. Where's that slipping pin you mentioned?""That was only a ploy to get you away from Mrs. Morris." Fran popped up off the vanity stool in a movement almost too spry for a thirty-year-old mother of two children.The friends left the powder room, giggling like girls, the way they had done through junior and senior high school. Fran drew a more serene face when they reentered the salon. Her intended spotted her and moved toward her and Sunny."Hon, the president of the company just arrived from Baton Rouge," Steve told her. "He can't wait to meet you. Says he wants to see the woman who convinced a confirmed old bachelor like me to get married. 'Xcuse us, Sunny.""Surely."She watched as the successful insurance executive whisked his future bride away to meet his boss. Steve proudly introduced Fran and her two young daughters. Sunny was delighted over Fran's newfound happiness. After being married to Ernie, she certainly did deserve it.Steve placed a protective and proprietary arm around Fran's slender shoulders. Sunny saw the instinctive, unconscious gesture. It wordlessly conveyed the way Steve felt about his future wife. Sunny attributed the empty feeling that suddenly seized her to hunger and decided to give the buffet another try.As if returning to Latham Green hadn't been bad enough in itself, it was adding insult to injury that she had had to return for a wedding. Don, the man she had almost married, was a subject she knew she would be faced with. At least she had survived the first mention of him and didn't have to dread that milestone any longer.Talking about him had brought back all the negative emotions she had left behind her three years ago. She had thought she was rid of them for good, but it seemed that they had been perching like gremlins on the city limit signs, just waiting for her to return. The moment she had, they had reclaimed her.She should have known better than to come back. But how could she refuse Fran's request to attend her second wedding? She couldn't. Nor would Fran settle for her appearing only at the ceremony and making a hasty getaway afterward. Before she realized what had happened, Sunny had committed herself to attending this party and staying until after the wedding. While she was here she planned to take care of some business, but she still had to live through the week. One week. One week in a town she had sworn never to see again. Would she survive it?Perhaps. But not without compensations. Compensations like indulging a craving or two, she thought as she eyed the array of desserts at the end of the buffet table. Little transgressions like that would help to keep her sane. She deserved a reward, didn't she? How could she lend Fran moral support if she didn't fortify herself with little treats?Before she could talk herself out of it, she took two triple-chocolate-dipped strawberries from a silver tray and found a secluded corner in which to eat them. Forbidden fruit they were, if a woman wanted to maintain a svelte figure. But forbidden fruit was just the kind Sunny needed at the moment.Holding the tiny green stem between her thumb and finger, she bit into the first strawberry. The dark chocolate outer layer was bittersweet against her tongue. Then the milk chocolate coated the roof of her mouth with its rich, velvet texture. Next, almost like a benediction, the mellow white chocolate soothed her palate and prepared it for the succulent ruby fruit her teeth sank into.She chewed it with slow, sinful relish, letting each layer of chocolate melt and fill her mouth with its particular degree of sweetness.It was a sensuous experience, not only for Sunny, but for the man watching her from across the room. Casually propped against the wall, ankles crossed, long legs at a slant, he watched Sunny Chandler's carnal destruction of two chocolate-covered strawberries. She made eating them such an erotic exercise that his own mouth watered, more for a taste of the lips and tongue that did them such delectable justice than for the strawberries themselves."Still got your eye on her, I see."He shifted his weight but didn't remove his gaze from the woman. "Sunny Chandler's an eyeful," he admitted to the man who had rejoined him."Always was. One of the prettiest girls in school. Classy, you know?""What she did before she left wasn't very classy. Why'd she do it?""Well now, if I knew that, I'd be the only one."The taller man looked down at his friend. "Oh, yeah? She just pulled a stunt like that and left?""Like that." He snapped his fingers. "Left her bridegroom--Don Jenkins, you know him--high and dry." He jabbed the other man in the ribs. "No pun intended."They laughed together, but not loud enough to detract attention from the future bride and groom, who were busy opening wedding gifts amid appreciative oohs and aahs. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The unforgettable novel of a woman who must return to her small hometown in the South, only to discover that the years-old secrets and scandals of her past are right where she left them—from #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Sandra Brown
  • Sunny Chandler always said she’d never return to Latham Green, Louisiana. Just three years ago she was at the center of the small town’s juiciest scandal. Now she’s been invited to her best friend’s wedding and has no choice but to go home. And with her return come the whispers . . . the looks . . . the rumors. It doesn’t take her long to see that Latham Green has nothing new to offer. Except maybe Ty Beaumont . . . Ty can see through the gossip to the real Sunny. Yet despite his easy Southern charm, Sunny doesn’t seem interested, even if she’s seriously tempted. For she’s harboring the agonizing secret of why she really left. What she needs is a man who’s not just a lover. And though there’s clearly much more to the roguish Ty Beaumont than meets the eye, Sunny doesn’t know if she can trust anyone with her secret heartbreak—even the one man who may be able to heal it.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(543)
★★★★
25%
(453)
★★★
15%
(272)
★★
7%
(127)
23%
(416)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Sunny Chandler's Return

Good light read. Sunny Chandler left town in shame. When she has to come back to town to be in her best friends wedding, Sunny just wants to stay under the radar, but no one will let her. Ty Beaumont is the sheriff, and determined to get Sunny in his bed.

This is an older book, but still enjoyable.
18 people found this helpful
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PUKE!!!

This book was ridiculous! How are we to believe this woman is the strong herione when she is as wishy-washy as a limp rag!! She fell in love with the biggest chauvinist in town and in less than a week and hated him the whole time. However, I can see why she hated him, he exibited no likable traits. I would NEVER recommend this book--except on a dare.
8 people found this helpful
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PUKE!!!

This book was ridiculous! How are we to believe this woman is the strong herione when she is as wishy-washy as a limp rag!! She fell in love with the biggest chauvinist in town and in less than a week and hated him the whole time. However, I can see why she hated him, he exibited no likable traits. I would NEVER recommend this book--except on a dare.
8 people found this helpful
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This is romance?

Sonny and Ty meet at a wedding where he makes a bet with a friend that he can have sex with her. Then he obnoxiously pursues her with completely inappropriate sexual innuendo -- peppered with more explicit sexual repartee.

Was there really a time that a man's unwanted crude, intrusive and chauvinistic comments were considered sexually alluring? A different author would have taken this plot beginning and turned it into a stalker novel rather than a romance.

And the supposedly strong and independent heroine keeps allowing the hero/stalker to persist in his way-too-personal-over-the-line-into-creepy innuendos. Is she really unable to shut him down and send him away? This is a book that promotes "Her lips said no but her eyes said YES!" Don't let your daughters read this one -- or your sons.

I didn't finish it. I assume that they wind up together and blissfully happy. In the real world, his behavior would portend an abusive relationship, at best.
7 people found this helpful
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I loved it!

Most of the reviewers here would say there is something wrong with me, but I adored this book! I got so caught up in the story that I read the whole thing through in one (long) evening. Yes, Ty was rather over-the-top in his faith in his seductive abilites, and the bet was juvenile, but I have known real guys just like him who (like Ty) are good guys at heart but put up a macho front. I like that Ty confessed about the bet to Sunny right away, saving us from the overdone "the truth comes out at the end and nearly ruins everything" drama. Brown creates great chemistry between the two, their dialogue is amusing, and their love scenes are both sexy *and* tender, a keeper combination for me. I am not ashamed to say I will be re-reading this one often, and think others should give it a try.
6 people found this helpful
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Classic Sandra Brown!

Sunny Chandler has returned to her hometown to attend her best friend's wedding. Faced with a past of scandal, heartbreak and secrets, she is determined to maintain her cool, confident persona, and not give the gossips of the town more to talk about. Imagine her surprise when she encounters the dashing, sexy, confident Sheriff Ty Beaumont, the opposite of any man she has ever met, and who claims to have made a bet to "bed her before the end of the week".

Most criticize the book for being "dated", but I realized that the book was written in the late 80's (note references Dynasty, Rambo, and Charles Bronson....and some of the, let's just say "dated" references that Ty makes) and that should explain it. However, I must warn you, there are some really funny parts in the story, that makes a woman in the 2007 laugh, but the datedness (if that is a word) makes it cute! However, keeping that in mind, if you like Sandra Brown, and you want to read something short and easy, where a confused, yet independent woman meets a take charge and slightly chivalrous and at times chauvinist guy, you will enjoy "Sunny Chandler's Return".
5 people found this helpful
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Predictable, pleasant yet somewhat poignant!

There is nothing unique about the plot of "Sunny Chandler's Return" that I haven't read in many-a-romance novel. This is one of the books that stays by my nightstands for reading to go to sleep. That said, I do think this is a pleasant read from Sandra Brown. Ty (the hero) is confident, almost bordering on the cocky state but he's got more substance that overides his unusual style of blunt delivery - my kind of guy. And he had an uncanny ability to see right through all the "BS" that surrounded Sunny's reason for leaving her groom at the altar. So at the end, one gets a lesson in life about a guy that's "just not that into you."
5 people found this helpful
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No Mystery Here

50 shades of gag me with a spoon! The only thing missing was Fabio on the cover. Even if you read it as a sexy romp, you'd be disappointed. Shallow and repetitive. An online search referred me to Sandra Brown as a mystery writer similar to Mary Higgins Clark. The only mystery was why I didn't throw it out after the first few pages.
3 people found this helpful
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What a Huge Disappointment!

I have been reading Sandra Brown for years. Her books usually have intrigue and a plot. This book had neither. If I wanted to read a victorian romance novel with a transparent plot, I sure wouldn't have paid this much for it. I would have have purchased a cheap romance novel which is all this really was. It's a shame when a good author starts trading on her name and publishing slop like this. At this point I am reluctant to purchase any more of her books.
3 people found this helpful
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3 ½ stars. I'm shocked at how this guy doesn't take no for an answer! But he was irresistible to her. It was fun but short.

STORY BRIEF:
During the wedding ceremony, when asked to say" I do," Sunny said "I don't" and walked out of the church. She then moved to New Orleans. She never explained why, and the town has been full of gossip and conjecture ever since. It is three years later. Sunny's best friend Fran is getting married and asked her to come home for a week to help. On Sunny's first night back she meets Ty at a pre-wedding party. Ty moved to town shortly after Sunny had moved out.

The entire book is about Ty wooing Sunny and winning her over. Secondary stories were discovering why Sunny walked out of her wedding and what bad things happened in Ty's past. It's shorter than most romance novels.

REVIEWER'S OPINION:
I recently read Night Angel and enjoyed the guy's "gentleness and restraint" in wooing and having sex with an abused woman. Ty in this book is as opposite as you can get. He is oblivious to the words "no" and "go away." I've read about a lot of guys who give orders in the bedroom, but I don't recall reading about someone as "forceful in flirting" as Ty outside the bedroom. For example: When he first meets Sunny, he walks up to her, chats for a minute and then says George "bet a new fly-casting rod against a case of Wild Turkey that I couldn't get you into bed with me by the end of next week." He then puts his arms around her and starts dancing with her, even though she said she didn't want to dance. She's almost in shock from his words and actions. Although she keeps saying no, Ty keeps showing up. He touches her and kisses her against her will, but each time she melts. I couldn't stop thinking about or comparing this to date rape, but Ty's actions were somehow positive, not negative. It didn't hurt that he was gorgeous and women swooned over him. And he never raped her. He forcibly kissed her and touched her, and she was welcoming in her responses, and then he would say goodbye - and then she was mad at herself because she didn't wanted him to stop. I think it worked because Ty wanted her to be happy and wanted things to be good for her. I wouldn't want a guy to read this book and get ideas thinking this is the way to treat women, but for a woman to read it, it's ok. It's a definite change of pace, and it was fun. It's light reading, no suspense or bad guys here - other than picking the right mate.

DATA:
Story length: 227 pages. Swearing language: mild. Sexual language: mild. Number of sex scenes: 2. Total number of sex scene pages: 7. Setting: current day Latham Green, Louisiana. Copyright: 1987. Genre: contemporary romance.
3 people found this helpful