⭐⭐⭐⭐ Was I hooked by that book? Yes. The adorable huskies strike again. The compelling writing and appealing characters, and I just couldn’t put it down.
BLURB
The feud between the Porters and the Lipins of Helen, Alaska, is still going strong. Lydia is running interference with her family to give her sister, Taylor, a breather from all the shenanigans while she is planning her wedding to Josh. (This is starting to sound a bit like a soap opera. 😁)
Nate Porter has escaped the town and the feud, but an injury has forced him home again to recover. He discovers his attraction to Lydia is just as strong as ever and it is returned. Will their growing relationship be able to withstand the force of the feud?
MY THOUGHTS
I don’t have a lot to say here. Read the books and start from the beginning, preferably. It’s an amazing series so far and I feel very privileged that I got the chance to read and review them.
I loved Nate and Lydia right from the start. Lydia is a bit uptight and everything in her world is ordered just so. I can identify with that. Nate’s return turned her world upside down and made her take a long and hard look at herself and at what she wants from life. He forced her to come out of her shell and live a little. Nate came to realize that the town he was trying to run away from so badly, is actually the place that he was meant to be.
The feud was a bit more low-key. I loved seeing Kelsey, Josh, and Taylor again as well. Trust me, you won’t want to put this one down once you get started. I can definitely recommend this to any romance reader. This is book three in the Hearts of Alaska series. You don’t necessarily have to read them in order, but it might help a bit.
Thank you to Netgalley for providing me with a copy. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Were you hooked by that book? Let me know in the comments below.
Other books in this series: Heart on a Leash and Paws and Prejudice
Genre: Contemporary Romance
EXCERPT
“I’ve got a guest checking in who says he was a friend of yours, and he asked if you were around?” Shawn sounded uncertain, and he kept his voice low, suggesting whoever this friend was, he might still be hanging around the lobby.
Theresa made a disapproving face. “You’re in a meeting. It’s not appropriate for the staff to be bothering you if it’s not an emergency.”
Shawn, who was on speaker, likely heard the comment, and Lydia gritted her teeth. “Did he leave a name?” she asked, ignoring her grandmother. Damn it, this was her hotel now. She’d run it how she liked, and she was meeting with family, not a client or a guest. Which Shawn knew.
Shawn also knew that whenever Theresa Lipin stormed into the hotel, searching for one or the other of her granddaughters, Lydia hung an invisible “Please Disturb” sign on her door.
Shawn lowered his voice further, but some excitement crept in. “It’s Cody Miller. Isn’t he the Hitched guy?”
[su_spoiler title=”Read more…”]Lydia froze for a second as her brain processed this information. Cody Miller, friend, and Hitched were not three things that were meant to go together. Yes, she’d been friends with Cody in school. More than friends at times, actually. And yes, Cody was the guy who’d built Hitched-a travel and ride-share app. But super-wealthy, tech darling Cody and friend Cody had always been two different people in Lydia’s mind, even though logically she understood that they were one and the same. Probably it had something to do with the fact that she hadn’t seen Cody since before college, and they’d lost touch completely soon after.
So how was it that Cody was in her hotel and asking after her? Cody might be from Helen, but the town was not the sort of location that was likely to draw tech magnates. The only explanation that made sense was that Cody was visiting family, but Lydia could have sworn his family no longer lived here.
Regardless, Cody was here, he was an old friend, and perhaps just as importantly, he was an ideal distraction.
“I’ll be right out,” Lydia told Shawn, and she ended the call.
“Hitched?” her grandmother asked. “That’s an app, correct?”
Lydia was only mildly surprised that Theresa was familiar with the app. Her grandmother might dislike most technology, but she wasn’t precisely a Luddite. She simply preferred face-to-face interactions. It was easier to turn a critical eye on someone that way.
“Yes.” Lydia stood, slipping her phone in her back pocket. Most days she tried to dress in a style that Taylor referred to as Alaskan professional, a snarkism that proved you could take the sister out of L.A. but you couldn’t take the L.A. entirely out of the sister. But today was a Friday, and Lydia hadn’t dressed to impress-jeans and a simple cowl-necked sweater would have to do for meeting a billionaire. After all, tech darlings got away with wearing whatever they wanted, so why not her? Lydia had never seen a magazine or news photo of Cody wearing anything other than jeans.
“Cody is the boy you went to your prom with, isn’t he?” her grandmother continued.
That was much more surprising than Theresa knowing what Hitched was. But then, she and Cody had been an on-again, off-again thing for years. “Yes.”
Theresa nodded thoughtfully, the savage anti-wedding beast soothed, her invitation forgotten about on Lydia’s desk. “He was a nice boy. Smart.”
Cody had been smart, no doubt. He’d beaten out Lydia for valedictorian. Yet Lydia assumed her grandmother’s praise had more to do with Cody’s family being firmly pro-Lipin in the feud.
“Rich now, too, I’m guessing,” Theresa said. “Interesting that he came by to see you.”
It was interesting, but that was Lydia’s cue to make a hasty retreat for the lobby. The next sentence out of her grandmother’s mouth would likely involve the state of Lydia’s ovaries. Her grandmother had been determined to get Lydia married to the right sort of guy-that was, one of her choosing-for years. While Theresa and the rest of the family might not approve of Taylor’s choice of husband, her younger sister getting married had only made the nonsense Lydia had to deal with worse.
Late January was not a typical time for people to visit Helen, although true outdoor recreation enthusiasts were never deterred by the weather or lack of sunlight. As such, the hotel was one-quarter booked, but that didn’t mean corners had been cut. Flames crackled happily in the oversize fireplace, casting flickering light over the rustic wood decor, and the air smelled faintly of pine thanks to the scented candles lit at the reception desk. The inn’s complimentary homemade cookies and coffee sat out near the glass doors that overlooked the patio. It was almost time for Taylor to bring out the evening wine, which meant Lydia had to shake their grandmother soon. Cody had distracted her, but for how long?
Speaking of Cody, it took Lydia a second to recognize him sitting in one of the armchairs by the fire. For some reason, she’d expected him to be surrounded by an entourage, like a rock star, but he sat by himself, playing with his phone in one hand and holding a peanut butter cookie in the other. He looked totally at home and was dressed to Taylor’s exacting Alaskan professional standards-rugged khaki pants, thick sweater, and durable boots. Lydia suspected those clothing items were made by a brand that the average Helen resident couldn’t afford, but for the first time, her brain was able to reconcile the two Codys it carried around.
He jumped up as she strode over to him. “Lydia! It’s so good to see you.” Cody pulled her into a hug that she hadn’t been anticipating, and she had to course correct before smacking her nose into his shoulder.
Well, that was unexpected, but they had been close during school. Lydia decided to shrug it off and follow his lead. “It’s good to see you too.”
Cody beamed at her, holding her hands while he assessed her. “You look fantastic. Haven’t changed a bit.”[/su_spoiler]
I like the sound of this one!
Yeah, it’s been a surprisingly good series so far.