Between the Lines (Main Street Merchants Book 5) by Paige Timothy
Kindle Edition, 83 pages
Published
February 8th 2015
by Trifecta Books
Source: I received a copy in exchange for an honest review
Description: Regan spends her days
working in a bookstore and her nights reading. She goes on grand
romantic adventures in her head . . . but not in real life. That all
changes when someone sweeps her off her feet and carries her up a
mountain.
My Review: "Me, my books, and chocolate--we're a match made in heaven." Right away, I knew I was going to connect with and like Regan. She is content to let her roommates find love and to just lose herself in her books, since that's where she feels romance belongs. She has the perfect job (working in a bookstore) and she's perfectly content with life. Until she lets herself get talked into a blind date with one of her roommate's boyfriend's good friends.
Jesse is a great guy--really down-to-earth. He owns an outdoors store and loves nothing more than to be one with nature, which is apparent since he goes camping almost every weekend. He's very kind, caring, and passionate about what he loves.
A camping trip gone wrong really brings out what's important in life, and not just Dutch oven potatoes. I enjoyed the realizations the characters come to, as well as the romance that blossoms, as fast as it was. This series is a lot of fun--full of clean romance, interesting characters, and unique story lines.
Content: Clean romance (kissing, brief mention of an assault); no language, violence, or religion; a few tense moments of peril.
About the Author:
Paige Timothy is the author of the new sweet romance series, Main
Street Merchants, which are fun, light romances set in the fictional
town of Aspen Ridge, Colorado. Under her various pen names, she has now
written over thirty books in a wide range of genres and looks forward to
writing many, many more. You can learn more about her at
www.paigetimothy.com
Does this feel like a book or a novella? I see it is only 83 pages.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a novella. I thought it was told in a way that felt complete, but it would've been fun to have it full length.
DeleteDefinitely a novella. I thought it was told in a way that felt complete, but it would've been fun to have it full length.
Delete