“Definitely a lot of unexpected surprises in this one that I didn’t see coming! God, I love these two even more.”Nick is bereft; a man adrift. Only Mia can save him from his demons, but how can she forgive? She knows what she saw...Secrets test love to its limits. Nick promised to let Mia in, but he just needed time. Now time is running out. But Nick isn’t the only one keeping things hidden. Mia isn’t quite what she seems. Forgiveness works both ways. Nick wants Mia to forgive his past, but will he forgive hers?As if they haven’t been through enough, just when they think they’ve put their troubles behind them, life throws them the ultimate challenge. When Nick acts without thinking it’s up to Mia to come through for the man she loves and find a way to ensure his freedom.Ultimately, love is nothing without acceptance. It’s about acknowledging all the fears and insecurities. Will Nick and Mia be able to accept each other’s flaws? Can they both Let Go of their fears and insecurities that threaten to rip them apart and somehow find their way to their Happy Ever After?The conclusion of the Frost Trilogy, Letting Go is an Erotic Romance with sexually explicit content.
From a small child I've loved to lose myself in stories. I'm a firm believer that if heaven exists, it contains every novel ever written and has big squishy sofas to curl up on and read for all eternity.
Before I started writing novels, my comedy play, The Magazine was performed at The Bush Theatre in London, and my poetry has been published in several anthologies. However, I knew what I really wanted to write were novels. With several unfinished manuscripts languishing in the depths of my computer's hard drive, it was my discovery of erotic romance that led me to ponder what my ideal romantic hero looked like. And thus, Nick Frost was born, and the epic love he shares with Mia spanning three books of Frost Trilogy. Then, after being nagged by my readers, of course I had to write Aiden and Jen's love story in the FT spin-off, Torn.
After that I delved into the world of full-on erotica, but, as much as I enjoyed writing it, I knew I wanted to write other genres because, along with my hope that if an afterlife exists I can spend mine in a divine library, I'm also a firm believer in not being pigeon-holed. Which is why I made my first foray into literary fiction with A Person Could Disappear Here, because, for me, writing is all about the characters and their story rather than genre.
My first novels were erotic romances. My men are hot, sexy and bossy and my women strong and sassy and give as good as they get. I absolutely refuse to write weak women because we don't all need to be rescued, but we do all need the love and devotion of a good man. Oh, and plenty of sheet-clawing, body-rocking, mind-altering sex! Despite all the hot sex, my erotic romances are really love stories, jam packed full of emotion because I believe... When it comes to Love and Romance, neither should be anything less than Extraordinary.
For those of you who like your romance to be less explicit, I am intending to publish Romance Only versions of Frost Trilogy and Torn - hopefully later this year.
I've also written some hot erotica that pulls no punches, so be prepared to be aroused. But if you like your erotica with a story and a side helping of emotion, you get that too - along with lots of hot sex.
As English as they come, I believe there's nothing that can't be solved, resolved, overcome or celebrated better than with a nice cup of tea. (preferably with a lovely slice of Victoria sponge cake with real buttercream icing) From Rachmaninov (whose piano concertos I often listen to while writing) to Aerosmith, my taste in music is best described as eclectic. And I make a mean chocolate cake.