What does not kill love… makes it stronger. Callie has a hard decision to make when her ex, Nicole tries to blackmail her with an old secret. The timing could not be worse as Maggie still suffers from nightmares related to previous traumatic events. Andy, a new resident, is eager to make friends and promote the prejudice Callie and Rebecca have grown tired of. They have learned that trust is the most important thing in a relationship, and when you have it, hate cannot touch you.
Barbara Winkes writes suspense and romance with lesbian characters at the center. She has always loved stories in which women persevere and lift each other up. Expect high drama and happy endings.
Discover a variety of genres, serial and standalone. Women loving women always take the lead.
This series just gets better and better as it goes along it’s getting almost to the top spot of my series list which is held jointly by J A Armstrong’s Alex and Cassidy and By Design both of these were read individually as I had to wait for publication.
Another good book. I really enjoyed the way the characters deal with small minded people. I have had to deal with bigots and wish I could do so as well as Rebecca and Callie. I highly recommend this book and this author.
Spring Fever is the third book in a series, and yes, it's important to read the first two books first. I dropped into a story that was in many ways already concluded. The whirl of romance has passed. The acute threats have been conquered.
What's left is a sweet, cozy story of two women building their life together in a small town. Familiar and presumably beloved characters make cameos with successes and struggles of their own. It’s a book about family, and while it may lack passion, there’s a great deal of warmth.
The “villain” is one-dimensional and behaves in histrionic ways that couldn’t quite get me to suspend my disbelief. However, her behavior reminds me that the internal and external conflicts involve people who aren’t villains, just people—the unhappy ex-husband, the questioning minister, the recalcitrant parents and teenagers. There’re good lessons in this pleasant, communal novel.
I was given this in return for an honest review by Inked Rainbow Reads.