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Moving Maverick
Moving Maverick: A Made Marian Novel | Lucy Lennox
1 post | 4 read
Maverick: I haven't been back to Rabbit Island, South Carolina, since my parents died and my grandmother, Mimi, rejected me. I'm only returning now to attend her funeral and sell an estate I never wanted. But the moment I step foot on the island and fall into Beau's arms, I realize it might not be so easy to say goodbye after all. Beau Talmadge was always the boy next door, but now he's no longer a kid. The man is hot as hell and pushes all my buttons in the very best way. I'm supposed to leave in a week. Sell everything, close the door on my past, and walk away forever. So why am I letting myself fall for someone who lives thousands of miles away? And how the hell am I going to break it off when it's time to go? Beau: It took one short summer to fall in love with Maverick Mitchell and fifteen long years to forget him when he left. I'd never expected to see him again, but when he shows up at Mimi's funeral looking lost and lonely I can't resist doing anything I can to comfort him. Falling into bed with Maverick is easy and the nights we spend together are as hot and steamy as a South Carolina thunderstorm. I know it's not smart. I know it's not what he planned. But dammit, Mav belongs in my arms, in my bed, and in my life. So how the hell do I get him to stay? Fair warning: Moving Maverick is a 73k word gay romance novel featuring sweet tea vodka, fancy salt and pepper shakers, guys catching crabs (not that kind), Aunt Tilly with a knife, and multiple detailed instances of man parts touching. Moving Maverick is the fifth book in the best-selling Made Marian series. It can be read on its own but is much more fun read as part of the series. The series begins with Borrowing Blue and each book follows a Marian brother's search for his HEA.
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Robbo
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This should cheer you up

Took you long enough is a brilliant catch phrase, and it sums up a romance that was years in the making. Its small town humour is great, many funny moments, tragic backstory, but it all comes good eventually. The HEA wasn‘t what I assumed, I like being surprised.