Mills & Boon Desire series delivers powerful, passionate romances…MEN of the YEARMAN of the MONTH
"I'm not a family man, but I sure as hell am willing to try." Travis Holiday, former Coast Guard officerWhen Travis learned he had a son, he'd gone into emergency mode: build a home, become a dad, settle down. No more heroics. But when he came upon the dark-haired goddess stranded in a coastal storm, Trav just had to help. He knew Ruanna Roberts was running from something but all that mattered now was his son. So why did his arms instinctively open up to Ruanna and not let go?
Some men are made for lovin' and you'll love our MAN OF THE MONTH, the last of The Lawless Heirs!
Dixie Burrus was born on September 09, 1930 in North Carolina's Outer Banks, U.S.A, where her family had lived for generations, to sea captain Dozier Burrus and Achsah Williams. Her father was the professional baseball player Maurice Lennon "Dick" Burrus, she has two sisters, Mary and Sarah Burrus.
Dixie is an artist and romance writer. She began writting contemporany romance novels as Zoe Dozier, now she writes her contemporary romances with her married name, Dixie Browning, and historical romances with her sister, Mary Burrus Williams as Bronwyn Williams, one combination of their married names. She has been awarded a Romance Writers of America RITA Award, and been a five-time RITA finalist. She has also won three Maggies, and numerous awards from the National Federation of Press Women and the NC Press Club.
Not typical romance book. These sound like real people, not young, not gorgeous , flawed but trying to do the right thing. I enjoyed it very much, especially since it was placed in the Outer Banks of NC. When it discusses car problems after the Oregon Inlet near the S curves and then says the first two gas stations, I knew the stations the author meant. It mainly is in the village of Buxton, a place I visit every year.
Typical Silhouette/Mills and Boon really. But a good story with a bit of a twist at the end. Nice bit of conflictign romance. Just my thing :D
Oh, one thing I do find a little jarring is the switch in pov. But I've just started reading another Mills and Boons and that ones doing the same too. So maybe that's kinda normal for this genre ???