COULD SHE RISK DISCOVERING WHO HE WAS? Once she'd felt the touch of the stranger's dark look, Chloe's life was never the same again. But was Nathanial Cutter a stranger? His hauntingly familiar gaze told her no.... Perhaps he was exactly who he claimed to be -- an author of mysteries. But Chloe's heart insisted he was someone else... the wanderer who'd appeared in her life fourteen years before, then disappeared, leaving her young dreams broken. Could Nathanial be the phantom who'd haunted Chloe's dreams -- the man who'd left his indelible mark on her heart? Was he really the man at Ivy Bridge?
New York Times and USA Today best-selling author Suzanne Forster is living proof of William Shakespeare’s maxim that the uses of adversity are sweet. Suzanne’s writing career began by accident. Literally. A car accident ended her dreams for a career in clinical psychology. During her recovery, she began writing to fill the hours, and before she was well enough to return to graduate school, she’d sold her first book and launched a new career. Since then Suzanne has written more than thirty novels and been the recipient of countless awards, including The National Readers’ Choice Award for Shameless, her mainstream debut. She’s received recognition for outstanding sales from Waldenbooks and Bookrak, and her recent novel, Unfinished Business, was made into a movie for the Oxygen Network. Suzanne has a Master’s Degree in Writing Popular Fiction, and she teaches and lectures frequently. Her seminars on Women's Contemporary Fiction at UCLA and UC Riverside were rated outstanding, and her most requested workshop, "The High-Concept Synopsis," is based on personal experience. Her breakout novel, Shameless, sold on a synopsis that triggered a bidding war and garnered her a six-figure contract. Suzanne has received considerable media attention, including a feature segment on Extra, NBC's news and entertainment magazine, and an Emmy Award–winning "Special Report" on CBS Channel 23 News. Her many print appearances include the L.A. Times, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Redbook and Orange Coast Magazine