When three women order shoes online at Hiheelia.com, their "magical" purchases help them kick-start their love lives by transforming them into sexy, confident beauties. Original.
Lisa Cach grew up in a farm near Portland, Oregon, a place she loves although she'd always trying to leave it. Wanderlust has led her to sail the Sargasso Sea, teach English in Japan, and trek the leech-infested jungles of Borneo. She has degrees in both English and psychology, two subjects that were fun to learn about but that guaranteed her low-paying jobs. Her father, she admits, may have been right about the MBA.
Lisa started to writing romances in her parents' basement during snatched moments from work. Since her writing career began her free time has become less and less as her novels become more and more popular. She's loved romance novels since Junior High School, and at least now she doesn't have to worry about getting caught reading one. Lisa married, and bought with her husband a home in Seattle, Washington. She describes her personal paradise as "...a pile of books, a plate of brownies, and the free time in which to enjoy them".
Readers fell in love with hiheelia.com in These Boots Were Made for Stomping by Julie Kenner, Jade Lee, and Marianne Mancussi. And now, the devilishly, delightful site is back again in this companion compilation, These Boots Were Made for Strutting. Authored by romance favorites Lisa Cach, Gemma Halliday, and Melanie Jackson, this time around hiheelia.com delivers shoes of a more luxurious nature. Instead of turning the wearer in to a fashion forward, butt kicking, sex kitten now the shoes bring out the inner party girl who's ready to strut her stuff. But do not fret, there's still plenty of romance, action, and sex to keep even the most impassive reader entranced. -Rebekah @ Simply Romance Reviews (btw, that's my review)
A fast read. Cute book. Had three different stories by three different authors which was nice. Each had a much different story-line except the whole "putting on magical shoes and becoming someone else" thing. I liked the second story cause it was more a murder mystery. The book's message was that brainy geek girls can be sexy too..with the right shoes ;)