Turn
up the Heat
Second Chances # 1
Second Chances # 1
By: Serena Bell
Releasing July 14, 2015
Loveswept
For readers of Jill Shalvis and Susan
Mallery, USA Today bestselling author Serena Bell teases all five senses in
this poignant, tantalizing novel of fantasies long hidden . . . and finally
indulged.
Aspiring
chef Lily McKee noticed Kincaid Graves the first time he walked into the dingy
diner where she waits tables. With his ice-blue eyes and primal tattoos, his
presence puts Lily on edge—and reminds her of all the unfulfilled longings she
isn’t pursuing while she’s stuck in this dead-end job. Without a doubt, the man
is dangerous to her long-term plans of leaving town and hiring on at a real
kitchen—and yet, she hungers for him, if even for just a taste.
Kincaid
didn’t come back to his coastal Oregon hometown looking for a good time or a
good meal. The ex-con has a score to settle, old wrongs to set right. But Lily,
equal parts innocence and insight, brings out an impulsive side of him he
thought he’d left behind in the past. And it only takes one intense moment of
weakness between them to make him consider the possibility of an entirely new
future—and the promise of passion beyond either of their wildest dreams.
Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23568227-turn-up-the-heat?ac=1
Goodreads Series Link: https://www.goodreads.com/series/147029-second-chances
My Review:
This was an emotional tale of love. Lily is living with her sister and waitressing at a diner until she can save enough money to more back to Chicago and start living her dream of being a chef. She finds herself fascinated by a big, silent tattooed customer and decides to take a chance on getting to know him. Kincaid is newly released from prison and is keeping himself out of trouble while looking for a way to settle a score and find justice. There are very few places in this small town that he can visit per his parole officer and Lily's diner is the one he finds himself frequenting the most. Not for the food but for a cute and sexy waitress. Kincaid is afraid of revealing his past but finds he is unable to keep his distance from Lily.
I really enjoyed reading this well written story of second chances. Lily is smart and very determined to be a chef and refuses to let anyone or anything stand in her way. She is deeply attracted to this sexy stranger. Kincaid believes prison changed him from a "nice" man into a "hard" man and that Lily is too good for him. I found him to be anything but a hard man, yes he is a man who was made harder but he is harder on himself than anyone else. As I was turning the pages, I felt myself be drawn into their romance and really enjoyed the building of their relationship. With fantastic secondary characters that add to this book with its wonderful blend of romance, drama and humor, readers will be left wanting more. Add a dash of kinkiness, this is a book that I felt has earned a 4 star rating! ~Booklover Sue
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Link to Follow Tour: http://www.tastybooktours.com/2015/04/turn-up-heat-second-chances-1-by-serena.html
Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23568227-turn-up-the-heat?ac=1
Goodreads Series Link: https://www.goodreads.com/series/147029-second-chances
Excerpt:
The other two waitresses had temporarily divvied up Lily’s tables between them, but Gina
hadn’t come in yet, so Lily
retook her tables. She made the rounds, getting back on track with her
customers. She brought the redheaded family desserts, refilled water glasses,
and took a few more orders. Then she grabbed the coffeepot and headed back to
9.
Getting near him felt like being drawn into some planet’s orbit.
His eyes scraped over her as she poured his coffee. “You cooked
this.” He tilted his head at his now empty plate.
She nodded.
“Best burger I’ve had here. By a mile.”
“Thanks.” She
couldn’t keep the pleasure
off her face.
She waited for him to say something else, but he didn’t, only kept those blue eyes on her. His
gaze should have felt cool where it touched her face, but it felt hot instead,
and it sent heat sloshing through her. She looked down. The book he’d been reading was on the table. A
textbook, with a stack of flags and a highlighter beside it. Abernathy’s Law in the United
States.
She rearranged her notions of him around that. Maybe a cop, but a
law student, too. Huh. “Light
reading?”
He grinned.
“You done?” she asked.
“I’ll take a slice
of chocolate cake.”
She went back for the cake, cutting an extra-thick piece for him. God,
the need to feed him was intense. And all mixed up with her other cravings.
Just
because he’s big doesn’t mean he’s rough. Doesn’t
mean he likes it rough. And it doesn’t matter, because that’s not what you’re
here to do.
But the frustration and disappointment of failing at her chance in
the kitchen got all wrapped up with her other feelings. The elation she’d experienced when her
ex-boyfriend, Fallon, had bound her—the ropes, the tape, the surge of power
that powerlessness had given her. The way she’d struggled, the way restraint had poured pleasure into her body.
How Fallon had turned away from it, in distaste and disgust.
How willing she’d
been to renounce her newfound self, her newfound joy, for what she thought
was love. For the trappings that came with love—the apartment she shared with
him, the mentoring he’d given
freely, the job he could offer her. How deep she’d buried her real self so she could be what he needed her to be and
so she could have the life he was offering her.
And most of all, the true shame and hurt—of losing it all, anyway,
to lies.
All of that, that tight knot of emotion, needed an outlet. It wanted
to work itself raw, shake itself off. It wanted to drown itself.
It wanted this man, rational or not. It wanted to unbury itself for
him. She
wanted to unbury herself for him.
Instead, she set the cake down before him.
“Did you get in trouble with the owner? I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said anything. I just wanted him to
know you did good.”
She wanted to shrug it off, but instead was horrified to discover
that the tears she’d pushed
back were threatening to fall. “It was a rookie mistake,” she said, steadying
her voice. “I should have known better. You never mess with the recipes. You
don’t question the chef.
Ever.”
She’d known, but
she’d wanted too desperately
to cook this man something he’d
love. Her desire to feed him would do her in. She knew it, now, already.
He was shaking his head, the muscles flowing in his thick—and yet
somehow finely built—neck. The skin under his tattoo was as smooth as satin,
and she realized she was fantasizing about licking it. Biting it.
He rubbed a thumb back and forth over the laminate table, as if
cleaning up a spot of something that had spilled. “Rumor is he’s crazy. Should
have retired years ago, but has some price in mind and won’t settle for less, even though the place
needs a ton of work. Meanwhile, he won’t change anything from his dad’s day—not the recipes, the decor, nothing. It’s not you, kiddo. It’s him.”
The kiddo killed her. Slew her dead, right then. It
should have felt demeaning, condescending, but it had the same effect on her
the rest of him did. Made her want to be a small thing he tossed around, the
way his sandpaper voice tossed off that word. Kiddo.
She needed to walk away from this craving, from this stranger who
didn’t feel like a stranger. As if maybe all those locked gazes, the fact of
his being there dependably week after week, had built a slow, strange,
invisible trust.
She was here in Tierney Bay, love life ruined, career in suspended
animation, self-regard shredded, having fled as far as she could from her
mistakes, and she had vowed not to make them again. She had vowed not to let
anything get between her and rebuilding her life. Because it wasn’t, couldn’t possibly be, worth it.
But in the end, there were two parts of her. There was the part that
wanted to rebuild her life.
And there was the part that just wanted to live.
****
My Review:
This was an emotional tale of love. Lily is living with her sister and waitressing at a diner until she can save enough money to more back to Chicago and start living her dream of being a chef. She finds herself fascinated by a big, silent tattooed customer and decides to take a chance on getting to know him. Kincaid is newly released from prison and is keeping himself out of trouble while looking for a way to settle a score and find justice. There are very few places in this small town that he can visit per his parole officer and Lily's diner is the one he finds himself frequenting the most. Not for the food but for a cute and sexy waitress. Kincaid is afraid of revealing his past but finds he is unable to keep his distance from Lily.
I really enjoyed reading this well written story of second chances. Lily is smart and very determined to be a chef and refuses to let anyone or anything stand in her way. She is deeply attracted to this sexy stranger. Kincaid believes prison changed him from a "nice" man into a "hard" man and that Lily is too good for him. I found him to be anything but a hard man, yes he is a man who was made harder but he is harder on himself than anyone else. As I was turning the pages, I felt myself be drawn into their romance and really enjoyed the building of their relationship. With fantastic secondary characters that add to this book with its wonderful blend of romance, drama and humor, readers will be left wanting more. Add a dash of kinkiness, this is a book that I felt has earned a 4 star rating! ~Booklover Sue
****
USA Today bestselling
author Serena Bell writes stories
about how sex messes with your head, why smart people sometimes do stupid
things, and how love can make it all better. She wrote her first steamy romance
before she was old enough to understand what all the words meant and has been
perfecting the art of hiding pages and screens from curious eyes ever since—a
skill that’s particularly useful now that she’s the mother of two school-aged
children.
Giveaway:
One Loveswept Mug
One Flirt Mug
Ebook copies of:
·
CLAIMED by Stacey Kennedy
·
MY OBSESSION by Cassie Ryan
·
DEEP AUTUMN HEAT by Elisabeth Barrett
·
TAKE THE FALL by Marquita Valentine
·
YOUR TO KEEP by Serena Bell
·
SWEET THE SIN by Claire Kent
Thank you for hosting TURN UP THE HEAT!
ReplyDelete