My Thoughts
Fritz is a small town farming boy who lost his heart many years ago to a girl who left for school and drifted out of his life. Years later she walks back in and he can't imagine ever letting her go. Kai regrets ever leaving him and losing what they had together. Her parents made it difficult to make any other choice back then though. When she comes home Kia realizes that she doesn't fit into the world her mother wants to keep her in and has to find her place in the world. That includes Fritz if he can forgive her and let her back into his heart.
I absolutely LOVED this sweet and sexy story of second chance love. Fritz is so hot with his down home southern charm and a bit of naughty talk that you can just hear the twang in. I adore Kia and Fritz together which makes for some over the top smoldering moments including a panty melting time at the lake. I love a really good love story wrapped around some steamy and Annie Evans gives it good with Betting the Farm. I can't wait to read the next one in the series.
I give Betting the Farm 5 hearts!
I absolutely LOVED this sweet and sexy story of second chance love. Fritz is so hot with his down home southern charm and a bit of naughty talk that you can just hear the twang in. I adore Kia and Fritz together which makes for some over the top smoldering moments including a panty melting time at the lake. I love a really good love story wrapped around some steamy and Annie Evans gives it good with Betting the Farm. I can't wait to read the next one in the series.
I give Betting the Farm 5 hearts!
About the Book
Fritz Carter has carved out a nice life in his hometown of
Serenity, Georgia. Together with his brothers, they’ve made the family farm
more successful than ever. Fritz wants for very little—save for the girl he’d
loved in high school. The girl who’d left Serenity behind…left Fritz behind as
well.
The girl who just sauntered into the local dive bar, looking
all woman and hotter than ever.
Fritz would have to be blind not to want Kai back in his
bed. He’d also have to be stupid to give her his heart. Not again. Not right
away. They’ve both changed, and past hurts haven’t healed as well as either had
thought. A few sultry summer nights in Kai’s arms don’t equal love…even if his
heart says otherwise.
Purchase Links
Amazon - Kobo
Straddling the Fence
Clay Hearts Book 2
by Annie Evans
Release Date: October 10, 2014
Synopsis
Turned down for her dream job, large-animal vet Bellamy
Haile is determined to drown her sorrows at the bottom of a tequila bottle—and
underneath the ripped bod of the gorgeous stranger she just met in the liquor
store. She’ll have time enough to nurse mild regret later, when she takes over her
uncle’s small practice in Serenity, Georgia.
Settled into an old house bequeathed by her grandmother,
Bellamy doesn’t expect one of her first vet calls to bring her face-to-face
with her one-night stand. Eli Carter happens to live nearby…and he’s more than
willing to pick up where they left off.
As Eli and his family welcome her into their hearts and
homes, Bellamy experiences a sort of love and acceptance she’s never known. But
even hot nights in Eli’s bed may not be enough to make her choose small-town
Serenity when a second chance at her dream job comes calling
Excerpt from Straddling the Fence
In truth, Eli had already given Bellamy a push,
metaphorically speaking, although that probably wasn’t his intention. Any
hesitancy she’d felt at getting involved with him vanished the second she spied
the repaired swing. Maybe even upon encountering the closed gate. And she
couldn’t forget the concern he’d shown for her living conditions last Saturday.
The frown he’d tried to chase away but kept returning to darken his eyes and
set his mouth in a tense line. It wasn’t as if she was living in squalor, but
she could admit it was scant. To an outsider it might appear lonely and disconcerting.
Temporary.
Isn’t it?
Admittedly, she did miss some material things—the huge comfy
bean-bag chair she’d sat in to read, her old bed with its wrought iron frame
she’d found at a yard sale for fifty bucks, and a few other odds and ends that
didn’t make the trip because of space constraints. Renting a moving truck
would’ve cost money she didn’t have to spare, and her mom and dad couldn’t be
troubled to shorten their trip and offer help of any sort.
She’d outright lied to Eli when she told him her parents
weren’t the overly involved type. The truth was they were emotionally
negligent. She’d never wanted for anything growing up except their attention,
their genuine involvement in her life. To feel like they cared about what
happened to her instead of always wondering if she’d been an afterthought. A
reproductive concession to satisfy some societal, parental or sibling pressure,
not a sincere desire for a child.
Down deep inside, Bellamy knew her parents loved her, but
they were selfish in expressing the sentiment in ways that really mattered.
This was why getting to spend summers and holidays with her grandparents had
meant so much. Here she’d felt wanted, loved and nurtured. Like she belonged.
In some ways, she supposed it fed her through the months in between visits.
Gave her something to look forward to.
Her phone chimed with a return message, jarring her from the
depressing thoughts and back to the moment.
Be there in 10.
She dropped the phone back into her pocket, let go a shaky
breath, and kicked the flip-flops aside to drag her toes through the cool,
dew-dampened grass. Let her mind focus on the tickling sensation instead of the
fast, anticipatory thud of her heart as she tried hard not to count off the
minutes in her head.
It didn’t dawn on her until she heard the approaching whine
of the big tires on his pickup that she’d locked the gate behind her earlier.
She waited for him to call, but he must’ve kept a spare key for himself or hid
one somewhere because after a brief pause headlights flashed through the side
of the yard and then he was parking behind her raggedy car.
Bellamy closed her eyes and listened for the soft
shush-shush-shush of his footsteps through the grass as he drew nearer. Beneath
her palms, the rope was hard and slightly abrasive since it hadn’t been handled
in years. The night air was crisp, but still held enough humidity for it to
feel moist against the bare skin of her legs. When his footsteps ceased and she
could sense him in front of her, she opened her eyes.
He was wearing the same cream-colored western shirt he’d had
on the night they met in Perry. Heat instantly gathered between her hipbones.
Forevermore that shirt, or anything similar in color or style, would be a
turn-on for her. Fabric washed to a fine softness, traces of his aftershave
clinging to the collar. The tanned expanse of his forearms and throat stark
against the lighter shade. Pearl snaps that came apart easily at her frenzied
urging, the sound an immediate and lasting aphrodisiac. Simple, really. Just a
shirt on a handsome man, yet Eli made the experience unique and unforgettable.
Moonlight turned his dark hair silvery across the crown of
his head and cast his face mostly in shadow. If she didn’t know him better,
he’d look threatening, intimidating. His lips parted as if he wanted to say
something before he closed them and stepped behind her.
She waited for his hands to grasp her hips and push, nearly
shivering in the interval, but instead they covered hers around the rope. He
pressed his face to her hair at the back of her neck, and even through the
thickness of the strands, she could feel his breaths warm her skin. Goosebumps
rose along her arms. Her nipples grew tight beneath her gown. Arousal pooled
low in her belly, spreading slow like honey through her core.
When his mouth found her ear, he whispered, “Every girl
needs a swing.”
Bellamy had to bite her lip hard to stifle a gasp of
emotion. It took her a moment to recover enough to respond. “Thank you is
woefully inadequate.”
“It’s enough, Bell. Just being here with you is enough.”
About the Author
A simple country girl who adores living in the South, I
enjoy spending time in the great outdoors, biking and working out with my
hubby, reading, and, of course, writing. I believe the most important thing you
can do for a child, outside of loving them unconditionally, is to put a book in
their hands. My favorite authors include Flannery O’Conner, Harper Lee, Gillian
Flynn, Megan Hart, Cara McKenna, and Anne Calhoun, just to name a few. You won’t
find me on social media much because I think that’s time better spent writing,
but I’d love to hear what you thought of my books, so shoot me a line at
annieevans.writerATgmailDOTcom.
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