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Take one out-of-work pastry chef . . .
Teeny Templeton believes that her life is finally on track. She’s getting married, she’s baking her own wedding cake, and she’s leaving her troubled past behind. And then? She finds her fiancé playing naked badminton with a couple of gorgeous, skanky chicks.
Add a whole lot of trouble . . .
Needless to say, the wedding is off. Adding insult to injury, her fiancé slaps a restraining order on her. When he’s found dead a few days later, all fingers point to Teeny.
And stir like crazy!
Her only hope is through an old boyfriend-turned-lawyer, the guy who broke her heart a decade ago. But dredging up the past brings more than skeletons out of the closet, and Teeny doesn’t know who she can trust. With evidence mounting and the heat turning up, Teeny must also figure out where to live, how to support herself, how to clear her name, and how to protect her heart.
352 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2011
The main character, Teeny immediately reminded me a bit of Bridget Jones. Like her, Teeny is slightly plump, blonde, blue-eyed, and a little clueless. Later I learned that this book is part of a series—a sequel. Now I’m not sure whether to be excited or cautious. The second book might be disappointing, but should I trust the author? We’ll see...
Teeny used to live on a peach farm with her aunt. She’s engaged to a man named Barney—or was it Bing? They dream of marriage, but the guy is a total cad. One day, Teeny catches him in the act with two naked women, hopping around on the lawn with badminton rackets in hand. In response, she climbs the nearest peach tree and starts throwing unripe peaches at them. Later, her ex-fiancé files a complaint against her, and Teeny ends up under house arrest. With very limited resources and forbidden to leave town, she is stuck.
While trying to meet her ex at a bar—or something like a bar—Teeny runs into her first love. A closeness develops between them, and he begins to fall for her again.
Funnily enough, I realized that the parts where I usually say “this book is amazing, everyone should read it” are easier for me to save for the end rather than the beginning. Anyway, I enjoyed the book—it was a nice little treat.