Book
4
Black
Jack Gentlemen
Release
Date: July 7, 2015
Blurb:
Detroit’s
expansion pro team has a hot star forward, fresh from the English
Premiere League. Thanks to a series of fatal misunderstandings
coupled with his famous temper, Declan MacGuire only has one thing
left to him—soccer—and he’s determined not to make the same
mistakes in his new life stateside.
Emily Keller, an accidental low-level PR flunkie for the team watches as Declan gets sucked into a whirlwind romance with Cassandra Dean, the team’s Queen Bee groupie, trying not to be jealous while the woman maneuvers him into a sickeningly familiar situation.
When things escalate, the team is forced to take sides, and Declan faces the toughest choice of his life.
Emily Keller, an accidental low-level PR flunkie for the team watches as Declan gets sucked into a whirlwind romance with Cassandra Dean, the team’s Queen Bee groupie, trying not to be jealous while the woman maneuvers him into a sickeningly familiar situation.
When things escalate, the team is forced to take sides, and Declan faces the toughest choice of his life.
Excerpt
“Hey,” a
familiar voice said, making her flinch and almost knock over the
glass of ice water the bartender had helpfully provided. She looked
up and came face to face with Declan, his deep green eyes sparkly,
his thick auburn hair slicked back, that stupid shirt hanging open,
per marketing department instruction. Her eyes went directly to his
cut torso as if pulled by magnets. She blinked and looked away.
“Hey there.”
She held up a finger, figuring it time to resume the alcohol intake.
Maybe she could pass out on the way home in the cab and just forget
this night ever happened. She shifted when he took the seat next to
her and brushed her arm with his.
“It ended all
right, didn’t it? I mean, for the charity or whatever it was?” He
grinned at her, forcing her to match it and sending a zing of lust
from the base of her spine to her toes. That singsong voice—dear
Lord, but she could listen to it all night. And she would, if given
half the chance.
Stop it, Emily.
“Um, yeah. I
mean. It’s for, uh…” She gulped, realizing she’d totally
forgotten the cause du jour that had made her have to
chaperone this nightmare. “Food Pantry.”
“Right,” he
said, accepting a cup of coffee from the bartender. “Cheers, mate.”
He sipped, looking straight ahead while she sat, gnawing the inside
of her cheek and wishing she could unhear what she’d just heard in
the hallway.
“Gabe and Lillian
leave?” She sipped the fresh gin and tonic, hand shaking. It was
their common conversational thread and she grasped at it.
“Aye,” he said.
The silence took on
a heaviness that made it hard to breathe. When she risked a glance at
him he was staring at her, his eyes narrowed. “What?” she said,
startled and defensive. “Do I have lime in my teeth?”
“No,” he said
and resumed sipping his coffee in silence.
She clenched her
jaw, willing something resembling a coherent small-talk starter or
even a mildly flirtatious comment to emerge. Nothing. She cleared her
throat, sipped, cleared it again, sipped some more. Her heartbeat
pounded in her ears. The heat from his leg seemed to increase. She
moved her thigh ever so slightly away.
“Well,” they
said in unison. She giggled and nearly fainted when a flush crept up
his neck into his cheeks.
“You first,”
they said together.
“Cut it out,”
she said. “God, you’re making me feel like a dolt.”
“Me?” He reared
back in mock dismay, hand to his bare—very bare—chest.
“Yeah, you.
Where’s Jason? Please tell me he didn’t decide to carry his
vendetta outside the building?”
“Nah, he’s over
there.” Declan pointed behind her. “He’s the one in the lip
lock with, ah, what’s her name. I think she’s actually gonna play
on the women’s team.”
“Oh, okay,”
Emily said, suddenly recalling the recent lip lock she’d been privy
to.
“I think Coop is
messing with your office girl,” Declan said, motioning for the
bartender to refill his cup.
“We call them
‘interns’ in the twenty-first century, at least here in the
colonies.”
He laughed and
blushed again. She had to sit on her hands not to touch his face, to
not brush a lock of thick red hair off his forehead.
“Aye, well, you
know what I mean.” He rubbed his jaw and ran his hand around the
back of his neck. “Bastard really clocked me.”
“I know. I’m
sorry.” She let herself do it—to reach out and just graze his
shirt-covered biceps with her fingertips. He flinched as if she’d
burned him. “I mean…right. Well.” She sighed and consumed the
entire drink in a gulp.
Declan gave a low
whistle. “I do love a woman who can do that. It’s the English in
me, I guess.”
“English?” She
said, wiping her lips with a BJG-logoed napkin. The bit of the booze
that wasn’t headed straight to her brain sloshed around in her
bloodstream, reminding her of her lack of food in the past few hours.
Oh well. Fuck
it.
She turned to him
and leaned on one elbow, deciding to flirt because why not?
For some reason,
the bar didn’t materialize under her arm and she sensed herself
sliding sideways. The teetering barstool made a loud screeching sound
right before Emily shut her eyes, waiting for the inevitable
embarrassing landing.
But there were
strong, warm arms around her waist and lips at her ear, making her
eyes fly open.
“Gotcha, PR
lady,” Declan said. She swallowed hard and got her feet under her,
stepping away from him at the precise second Cassandra appeared,
smiling until she saw that Declan still had one hand on Emily’s
arm. “You all right?” he said, looking into her very soul.
Oh good Christ,
stop it! You are drunk off your ass. This is no stupid romance novel.
He is not looking into your soul. He’s staring down the front of
your sleazy costume.
“Well, isn’t
this cozy,” Cassandra-who’d-just-been-fucked-by-Max said with a
sneer.
“Where’s Max?”
Emily asked, unable to stop herself, even while knowing better than
to engage in any kind of a cat-fight with this bitch.
“Who?”
She had to give the
woman credit. Not even a quick blink or blush to acknowledge the
blatant cheat. Emily watched as Cassandra ran her fingers through her
hair, and then touched Declan’s arm. He let go of Emily and stepped
away, blinking fast as if waking up from a trance.
“Time to go,
Scotty, my darling.” Cassandra took his hand and turned him away
without another word. But as Emily bent down to slip her shoes off,
grateful yet sad to let go of the moment, the other woman looked
around and pinned her with an accusatory glare.
With a long sigh Emily righted the
overturned barstool and sat slumped, mostly makeup-less and wishing
herself anywhere in the universe but here.
SERIES
INFO
Book
1
Bad
boy of European football, Nicolas Garza is about to hit American
shores with a vengeance. Signed by the Detroit Black Jack Gentlemen
as lynch pin for their expansion club, Nicco only half believes he’s
making the right move. But with a past full of ghosts and rotten
behavior chasing him from his homeland, he has no real
choice.
Parker Rollings is a college soccer superstar, but his parents’ plans for their only son do not include professional athletics. When the Black Jacks approach him to finalize their roster, Parker leaps at the chance to keep playing, leaving behind medical school, stability and his first and only college sweetheart.
Nicco and Parker face off as bitter rivals for a coveted starting spot at midfield and are forced to channel their negative energy into something positive for the sake of the group—and themselves.
All eyes are on the fledgling team in its debut season. It’s crucial that the Black Jacks prove all the doubters wrong. They must make a good showing in the league and with new fans. But player drama, club dynamics, and misplaced priorities may tear it apart before it even begins.
Parker Rollings is a college soccer superstar, but his parents’ plans for their only son do not include professional athletics. When the Black Jacks approach him to finalize their roster, Parker leaps at the chance to keep playing, leaving behind medical school, stability and his first and only college sweetheart.
Nicco and Parker face off as bitter rivals for a coveted starting spot at midfield and are forced to channel their negative energy into something positive for the sake of the group—and themselves.
All eyes are on the fledgling team in its debut season. It’s crucial that the Black Jacks prove all the doubters wrong. They must make a good showing in the league and with new fans. But player drama, club dynamics, and misplaced priorities may tear it apart before it even begins.
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MAN
ON EXCERPT
A handful of fresh-faced young Americans interspersed in the group,
which made Nicco feel old. Which totally pissed him off. What was
Inez thinking anyway? There were two players per position in the
room, two strong contenders for each spot—except his. He sipped his
water bottle and glared at the Germans. Nervous tension gnawed at his
gut but he kept his face calm. Finally when their temporary coach
showed up and flipped the blinds closed, he relaxed.
So everyone in the room has to fight for their spot except me?
That works.
He dropped his feet to the floor at Rafe’s pointed glance and
propped his elbows on the table prepared to ignore the forthcoming
pep talk.
He’d already made plans for the night and wanted to rest up
beforehand. This goofy welcome pep talk would be as good a time as
any. Letting his thoughts wander to the nightclub catering to gay men
and promising full discretion, he made himself stop obsessing over
the failed therapy session.
The door clicked open and all eyes landed on the tall, blond man who
walked in, backpack on his shoulder, dressed to play. Nicco’s scalp
tingled at the sight of him—strong torso, long legs, firm jaw
covered with several days’ worth of fuzz. Good Christ but he was a
perfect specimen. Nicco kept his casual stance but startled when the
kid’s bright blue eyes and huge white smile landed on him.
He resisted the urge to smile back. Something about the man made
Nicco distinctly uncomfortable but horny at the same time. He
suddenly wished he’d held onto the shrink’s business card.
“And Parker will be working with you, Nicco.”
He sat up, knocking his water to the floor as Rafe’s words got his
immediate attention. What the fuck? He stared at the polite hand the
kid stuck in his face then over at Rafe. His throat closed up between
the proximity of the impossibly handsome man and realization of the
fact that the vision of masculine perfection he’d lusted after for
the last few seconds wanted to take his spot on the field.
Oh hell no.
He leaned back again and ignored his inner polite self. Instead, he
smirked, ignored the punk, and turned to face their coach as if
suddenly fascinated by what the guy had to say. Parker stood a
minute, and Nicco watched his face turn red before he sat in the one
empty chair nearest the door.
Rafe passed out new phones, reminded them of their obligation to
“tweet” and “post profile updates” on Facebook at least three
times a day. All shit Nicco already knew. Rafe’s hot young lady
assistant issued key cards to the ones who’d just arrived,
including the kid Nicco studiously ignored but whose very presence
was making the front of his jeans uncomfortable.
Book
2
Free
will makes us human.
Choice makes us individuals.
Love makes us unique.
Metin Sevim has it all. At the pinnacle of international soccer playing success, he has managed to craft a perfect world for himself along the way.
When fate strips him of free will and the ability to choose his own path, he retreats from everyone and everything, destroying his hard-won career in the process.
Dragged back from the brink by his desperate family, Metin reluctantly agrees to coach the Black Jack Gentlemen Detroit soccer team but remains debilitated by memories and loss. When a surprising friendship emerges, it renews his passion for life, providing much needed solace… and extreme complications.A saga of family dynamics and gender politics that cuts across cultures and circumstance, Red Card illustrates the human capacity for forgiveness through the life of one man as he attempts to rebuild his shattered existence.
GoodReads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / iTunes / Smashwords
Choice makes us individuals.
Love makes us unique.
Metin Sevim has it all. At the pinnacle of international soccer playing success, he has managed to craft a perfect world for himself along the way.
When fate strips him of free will and the ability to choose his own path, he retreats from everyone and everything, destroying his hard-won career in the process.
Dragged back from the brink by his desperate family, Metin reluctantly agrees to coach the Black Jack Gentlemen Detroit soccer team but remains debilitated by memories and loss. When a surprising friendship emerges, it renews his passion for life, providing much needed solace… and extreme complications.A saga of family dynamics and gender politics that cuts across cultures and circumstance, Red Card illustrates the human capacity for forgiveness through the life of one man as he attempts to rebuild his shattered existence.
GoodReads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / iTunes / Smashwords
RED
CARD EXCERPT
“It’s
your hips that are the problem.”
Alicia
started at the sound of his now-familiar, sing-song accent. She’d
been kicking a line of balls into the net, one after the other for
about fifteen minutes since she’d been early in her haste to get
the hell out of her house and away from her sister’s violent
disapproval.
Taking
a breath, she crossed her arms and studied him. Metin wore a pair of
dark blue soccer shorts, plain heather-gray shirt, and cleats, as
easily as he’d worn the dress pants and crisp cotton shirt the
night she’d met him—the
night you fucked him, you mean.
He
stood, loose-limbed, at ease in his element. His teeth glowed against
his dark skin. The eyes she had melted into not forty-eight hours ago
shone with something she couldn’t identify—happiness? Sarcasm?
Lust? Who knew? Hoping to hide her frustration, she bent down to tie
her laces tighter so he couldn’t see her face flush when her gaze
hit the front of his shorts.
She
rose, determined to resist the take-me-now aura the guy threw her
way. He probably didn’t even realize he did it. Not anymore. “Okay,
I’ll bite. What’s wrong with my hips?”
“Come
at me.”
She
blinked, confused. “Um, huh?”
“Attack,
make like you want to score. You know? Like you do in games?”
“Oh,
right.” Dropping the ball tucked under her arm, she glanced over
his shoulder at her target. He let her, trotting backward a few
steps, then made for the ball. She feinted, maintaining possession
before dribbling a few more feet.
He
came out of nowhere as she was about to make her final scoring
charge, stripping her of the ball and sending her crashing to the
turf.
“Ow.
Shit,” she muttered, getting to her feet, a familiar, angry
competitiveness stripping all the horniness right out of her head. “I
still don’t get what….”
“Do
it again.” He kicked the ball toward her, harder than necessary,
but she stopped it and placed her cleat on top contemplating a
different strategy.
Shifting
to the side, she danced past him, using all the speed she could
muster, and made straight for the goal. And there he was again,
taking the damn ball away from her as if she were a rookie.
She
tried to shield it, putting her back to him and sensing every inch of
his warm, perfect physique against her skin. Forcing herself to
focus, she landed a hard elbow to his midsection and escaped his trap
then traveled down the field alone, turning on all her motors, no
longer hearing anything, way into her zone.
And
then, the damn man appeared in front of her again, batting the ball
between her legs and taking off in the other direction, hand to his
side where she’d nailed him.
“God
damn it, Metin. What is your point? You’re a pro. I’m an
unemployed college graduate. You’re a man. I’m not. You make
money at this, and I never will. What the hell are you trying to
prove?” Her legs hurt from her workout the day before and she could
barely catch her breath. She was, in a word, miserable. But the sight
of him a few yards away, messing with the soccer ball while he stared
at her, brought visions of tackling him, holding him down, and
kissing him right to the front of her overheated brain.
“Once
more.” The soccer ball smacked the back of her legs so hard she
yelped. “That’s your fucking yellow card for the elbow. One more
and you’ll sit.”
Book
3
A
submissive once, a submissive forever?
A man on the run from the only life he’s ever known, Brody Vaughn is poised to accept the Black Jack Gentleman’s newly vacant goalkeeper’s position. It’s a desperate move, but one he must take to regain his emotional equilibrium. Reeling from his Mistress’s rejection and on the ragged edge of a total breakdown, he arrives in Detroit. Numb with thinly veiled grief, he walks into the club’s front office completely unaware that an encounter with true destiny awaits him.
Sophie Harrison has seen it all--as Domme, sub, and victim. Now that her complicated circumstances have landed her as legal counsel for the expansion Black Jacks team, she holds herself aloof in body and spirit. Nothing and no one gets past her fiercely guarded walls. Until the day she looks up to greet the new goalie standing in her doorway, his raw combination of vulnerability and strength making her breathless.
Two people, horribly scarred by the excesses of the BDSM lifestyle and hiding from their true selves, meet across a desk over a simple contract. All bets are off.
GoodReads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / iTunes / Smashwords
A man on the run from the only life he’s ever known, Brody Vaughn is poised to accept the Black Jack Gentleman’s newly vacant goalkeeper’s position. It’s a desperate move, but one he must take to regain his emotional equilibrium. Reeling from his Mistress’s rejection and on the ragged edge of a total breakdown, he arrives in Detroit. Numb with thinly veiled grief, he walks into the club’s front office completely unaware that an encounter with true destiny awaits him.
Sophie Harrison has seen it all--as Domme, sub, and victim. Now that her complicated circumstances have landed her as legal counsel for the expansion Black Jacks team, she holds herself aloof in body and spirit. Nothing and no one gets past her fiercely guarded walls. Until the day she looks up to greet the new goalie standing in her doorway, his raw combination of vulnerability and strength making her breathless.
Two people, horribly scarred by the excesses of the BDSM lifestyle and hiding from their true selves, meet across a desk over a simple contract. All bets are off.
GoodReads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / iTunes / Smashwords
SHUT
OUT EXCERPT
“Vaughn!
Goddamn it.”
Brody
sat, staring at his feet, ignoring the usual post-match noise and
bustle around him. Most especially he hoped to hide from the voice of
Rafael Inez, the club’s manager. Reminders of how poorly he’d
performed today were not going to help him. He’d been playing
soccer in some capacity since he walked, since he had memories of
anything. And today had been among his worst, ever.
From
the streets of Nashville and the hills of East Tennessee, he’d been
on teams, in clubs, trained by himself, trained by pros, the whole
goddamned nine yards. He’d seen every sort of match condition,
coaching, officiating misstep, and parental overreaction. He realized
what it meant to suck serious ass—he’d done so today. And he
understood why, too—hence the dark clouds draping his consciousness
“Fucking…
shit.” The team manager drew closer, his deep voice joined by
another, as a sort of bonus, really. He leaned against the dark wood
lining the walls in the over-the-top, fancy locker room.
Metin
Sevim, the Turkish coach, once a Spanish league phenom, had had the
world at his feet until a horrific tragedy struck, leaving him drunk
and useless for years. Apparently recovered, he had a look on his
face Brody Vaughn caught loud and clear—the “we
lost and it is pretty much your fucking fault”
glare that coaches the world over affected.
Exhausted
in mind and spirit, sick of the chewing out before it even started,
Brody gazed at both men. Rafe’s snapping eyes reflected the same
expression as Metin’s. He opened his mouth first, but the Turk put
a hand on his arm. The men regarded each other as the swirl of
post-match activity came to a loud peak.
Players
in various stages of undress wandered in and out of the main locker
room, grabbing towels, pulling on the dress pants, shirts, and ties
the club required of them when entering and leaving the facility. One
thing Brody would say about the former-hot-headed,
player-turned-failure-turned-coach, Metin knew when not to talk. He
tilted his head, still pinning Brody with something that faded from
this is your fault
to what the hell is wrong with you?
Then
he sighed and, to Brody’s surprise, dropped onto the chair next to
him, leaned forward, elbows on knees, and seemed to examine the
expensive, rubberized floor. Brody hadn’t even made it to the
shower yet. He felt so weighed down and lethargic, just lifting his
arms to put his head in his hands took more energy than existed on
the planet. He understood why, along with the fact that there wasn’t
a thing to be done about it.
How
would he even begin to describe his… issue? Heart pounding, legs
aching, shoulder screaming where he’d landed on it, hard, then
waved away the trainer at the sixty-fifth minute. By that time all of
the players were pretty gassed from the late summer heat, but held
on, toe-to-toe, with the Canadian national team in a friendly. The
stupid, sneaky forward had seen him wincing, favoring his left
shoulder, and drove the ball right in on his newly weakened side. It
had been a simple fifty-fifty ball; face to face. He had
blown it, him and his overpaid, lame ass, wobbly self.
Thanks
to his one quick encounter with the front office legal woman, he’d
been left in a quivering, useless, uncertain heap of need. Fuck that.
He had to get a grip.
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GENERIC INTERVIEW
PLEASE
PICK A FEW (3-5) OF THESE QUESTIONS TO INCLUDE IN YOUR POSTS
How
did you come up with the idea for this story?
I’m
a huge fan of soccer, at almost every level, since my daughter plays
at the National league level with her team full of 17 year old girls
and we subscribe to every soccer channel available to us. Living in
Europe for several years had a lot of influence on that too but
honestly, it’s the game with the hottest dudes, so….yeah. I
figured, Detroit needed a team and it would be a team full of misfits
and outcasts.
Where
do you find your inspiration?
Um….usually
in the bottom of a bottle of craft beer.
Is
there anything you find particularly challenging in your writing?
Trying
to be heard above the crowd of book options when my books don’t
adhere to any formula.
What
are your current projects?
Finishing
up The Love Brothers, currently my best selling series with FAMILY
LOVE, the final novel, releasing September 2, 105. Also, looking
ahead to a 6th
revision of my thriller novel PRECIOUS VESSEL. Plus a couple of hot
RE (Real Estate) romance novels coming end of the year: APPRAISED &
CONTINGENT.
Tell
us about your first book. What would readers find different about the
first one and your most recent published work? FLOOR TIME was the
first book I wrote and it’s going strong, anchoring my top selling
Stewart Realty series. The first book I got published was called “The
Rookie,” and it’s no longer available if that tells you anything
about it. It was set in the craft brewing world which many of my best
selling books still are, however.
Is
there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
In
the Black Jack Gentlemen series there is a “message” or at least
a “point” to each book. Man On deals with homosexuality in pro
sports. Red Card with (initially) the gender inequality in pro
soccer. Shut Out is about two people badly scarred by the super
popular BDSM fetish. Hat Trick (the newest book) deals with pro
athletes with hot tempers and graspy groupies.
Does
music play any type of role in your writing?
I
listen on occasion but honestly I don’t hear anything when I’m in
“the writing zone.” That makes it easy for me to write where I
might find myself.
Are
experiences based on someone you know, or events in your life?
Not
really. I make sh*t up mostly but of course, set my books in worlds
with which I have a full working knowledge.
What
books have influenced your life most?
Gone
With The Wind, The Stand, The Bible (I am a preacher’s kid after
all), Cat’s Eye by Margaret Atwood and recently, The Art of Hearing
Heartbeats by Jan-Phillip Sendker.
Are
there any new authors that have grasp your interest?
Hmm….I
enjoyed reading a thriller by fellow Michigan author Claudia Whitsitt
recently and am reading a cool novel set in Mexico about a craft
brewery pre-release by Leslie Patino (her first novel).
Can
you share a little of your current work with us? (I assume this is
the Hat Trick excerpt?)
Do
you have anything specific that you want to say to your readers?
I
would say to future readers that taking a chance on Liz Crowe novel
might require a leap of faith that even though I’m not giving you
any sort of fairy-tale fantasy, I guarantee you will be entertained,
perhaps even titillated and satisfied by the end.
How
can readers discover more about you and your work?
I’m
all over facebook and twitter, LizCroweAuthor and @beerwencha2 and my
blog is www.brewingpassion.com
Do
you have a special time to write? How is your day structured
writing-wise?
HA!
Nope, I’m also a successful realtor and brewery marketing
consultant so I write whenever I can fit it in!
Why
did you choose to write [genre] stories?
I
didn’t set out to write any sort of genre and rest assured my
“romance novels” break all sorts of rules (and piss off a few
readers). I love books about relationships, be they romantic or
between friends and family so that’s what I write.
What
is for you the perfect book hero?
A
guy who has a real job, has worked damn hard to get where he is, and
is proud of his ability to be not “alpha,” not “beta,” but
“gamma.” As in “the whole package.”
When
you start a book, do you already have the whole story in your head or
is it built progressively? Nope. I’m a dyed in the wool pantser.
That story starts and just rolls out of my brain, through my
fingertips and onto the screen.
When
and why did you begin writing? I started writing in 2008 on a bet
from my spouse.
I
won, by the way.
When
did you first consider yourself a writer? When I managed to string
some sentences together into paragraphs which then became chapters,
and then a book.
List
three books you have recently read and would recommend.
The
Art of Hearing Heartbeats by Jan-Phillip Sendker
The
Husband’s Secret by Lianne Moriarty
Beneath
This Mask by Meghan March
Tell
us something that people would be surprised you know how to do.
I
am a kick ass singer and can still sing some church hymns by heart.
Will
you write more about these characters?
I’m
moving on to some new projects that are pretty exciting but you never
know….
About
Liz Crowe
Amazon best-selling
author, mom of three, Realtor, beer blogger, brewery marketing
expert, and soccer fan, Liz Crowe is a Kentucky native and graduate
of the University of Louisville currently living in Ann Arbor. She
has decades of experience in sales and fund raising, plus an
eight-year stint as a three-continent, ex-pat trailing spouse.
Her early forays into
the publishing world led to a groundbreaking fiction hybrid,
“Unconventional Romance. Worth the Risk,” which has gained
thousands of fans and followers interested less in the “HEA” and
more in the “WHA” (“What Happens After?”).
With stories set in the
not-so-common worlds of breweries, on the soccer pitch, in successful
real estate offices and at times in exotic locales like Istanbul,
Turkey, her books are unique and told with a fresh voice. The Liz
Crowe backlist has something for any reader seeking complex
storylines with humor and complete casts of characters that will
delight, frustrate and linger in the imagination long after the book
is finished.
Don’t ever ask her
for anything “like a Budweiser” or risk bodily injury.
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