


Unfortunately those experiences lead Wyatt in prison due to a college prank. Preston met Wyatt when he was 13 years old and Wyatt only 6 for sure it was not the time to claim his mate, and so, with the agreement of Wyatt’s family, he moved in the background, giving the time to Wyatt to become older and doing his own experiences. Preston and Wyatt’s story is about young men/boys all right, both of them are werewolves, and so this is not your ordinary love story, but truth be told the supernatural nature of both men is not so front stage to overwhelm the plot. Assassin is more wordly, action packed, international affair Shifter is more homey, Friday night beer with friends, Sunday barbeque with family. Oh, don’t get me wrong, it’s for sure the same author, the two books are tightly intertwined, but I had the feeling the author was playing a game being this a double series, Assassin/Shifter, and having first read a book in the Assassin line and then on the Shifter one, my idea is that she is using different style for the different lines. Now Storm has one chance to prove that together they have the makings of a perfect family.Elisa_rolle This is the second book by Sandrine Gasq-Dion I read, and to me it seemed like it was a completely different author.

But Jayla has already made plans for a child of her own-and a man famous for blazing affairs that burn out quickly doesn't figure into it. A business trip to New Orleans sparks a chance reunion and a scorching, five-alarm weekend. Women call him "the perfect storm," and Jayla Cole knows that Atlanta fire chief Storm Westmoreland lives up to his devastating reputation. But awakening Madison to pleasure backfires-because now no other woman can satisfy him…. Stone would be happy to offer buttoned-up Madison Winters some tips while he acts as her tour guide through the rugged mountains. And completely unaware of how good it feels to give in to your wilder impulses.

Two classic Westmoreland novels from New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author Brenda Jacksonīestselling thriller writer Stone Westmoreland can think of plenty of ways to describe the stranger he meets on a flight to Montana.
