by Katie Golding
Publication Date: 7/28/2020
He’s got one last chance
To make things right
Billy King may be smiling
under his black Stetson, but the plain truth is this cowboy-turned-racer is
hurting: for his horse back in Memphis, for his girl with one boot out the
door, and for his faltering career thanks to an injury that’s not getting any
better. The moment he’s free from the press circuit, Billy bolts home—resolved
to heal, and ready to win Taryn’s heart a second time.
Hopefully, before the love of
his life is gone for good.
Taryn Ledell never wanted to
fall for sweet blue eyes and a deep southern drawl. As a World Superbike racer,
she had plans, and none of them involved playing second fiddle to any man. But
now he’s back, and she’s forced to make some hard choices. With her sponsors
eager for a decision, Taryn finds herself tangled in all the lines they’ve
drawn in the sand. But broken bones and broken hearts don’t heal overnight, and
the cost of forgiveness can be sky high: unless Billy can prove that his heart
never left the ranch…or her.
MY REVIEW:
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Billy King may be smiling under his black Stetson as he waves for the MotoGP press corps, but the plain truth is the motorcycle racer is hurting: for his horse back in Memphis, for his girl with one boot out the door, and thanks to an injury that's not getting any better.
Taryn had told Billy no more bull riding or she is out. She watched her best friend bury her fiance on what was supposed to be their wedding day because he was killed from bull riding. Taryn is also a motocross driver and competes.
Ok I really liked these characters but the thing that I didn[t get is how much Taryn is against bull riding but ok for moto cross competing. To me that can be dangerous as well and 1 wrong move and you can be killed. That was the main thing that bugged me.
The other is no matter what Billy did, his father would find fault with. Billy's younger brother also drove in the same races and never win but his father never said a word to him. But after Billy's wins his father would say he should have done some of the moves his brother did. I think I would have blown up at him.
I received this from NetGalley and Casablanca for review.
Taryn had told Billy no more bull riding or she is out. She watched her best friend bury her fiance on what was supposed to be their wedding day because he was killed from bull riding. Taryn is also a motocross driver and competes.
Ok I really liked these characters but the thing that I didn[t get is how much Taryn is against bull riding but ok for moto cross competing. To me that can be dangerous as well and 1 wrong move and you can be killed. That was the main thing that bugged me.
The other is no matter what Billy did, his father would find fault with. Billy's younger brother also drove in the same races and never win but his father never said a word to him. But after Billy's wins his father would say he should have done some of the moves his brother did. I think I would have blown up at him.
I received this from NetGalley and Casablanca for review.
Katie Golding writes high-octane romance
about complicated people always searching for the next thrill ride. She lives
in Austin, Texas with her beloved husband and son.
Author
Website: https://www.katiegoldingbooks.com/
Purchase
Links:
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2LsH8Ii
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Kobo: https://bit.ly/3eWP69p
Bookshop: https://bit.ly/2LmMa98
Rafflecopter:
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Link to
giveaway: http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/54ca7af7928/?
Excerpt:
My whole heart was thumping strong in my chest while everything in
me begged to kiss him. But I couldn’t bring myself to make the first move—I
wanted Billy to go for it. To step up and take the risk and feel all the
elation of me rewarding it with full-on acceptance because for once, what a guy
wanted was exactly what I wanted, too.
He let out a deep sigh that was almost more of a groan, sinking my
hopes. “You’re not making this easy on me at all, are you?”
“Making what easy?”
He looked away, unable to hide his smile. “Nothing.”
It was too much fun; I couldn’t resist. The way he was, the way he
made me feel. “You want to kiss me, Billy?”
He grinned at the ground. Probably, I was pushing too hard, too
fast, but I didn’t really know any other way to go. Not when I wanted him to
kiss me that damn bad.
When he lifted his head, there was no fear in his blue eyes. Just a
pure kind of acceptance that he wasn’t going to be happy until he got what he
wanted. “Yes, ma’am. I do.”
My heartbeat took off as Billy stepped closer, his hat hiding both
of us from the February moon. The rich scent of him was too tempting: I pulled
it deep into my lungs, drowning in the masculinity rippling off him. But he
still wasn’t touching me, no matter how much I wanted him to.
“Would that be all right?” he whispered.
I don’t remember nodding or breathing, just beaming at him and
praying my self-restraint could hold on a little bit longer. “I’ll answer that
in a minute.”
Billy smiled, and then I finally got everything I’d been craving. He
brushed his fingertips over my cheek with a touch softer than the wishing
petals of a dandelion, hooking a knuckle under my chin and tilting my lips up
to his. My eyelashes fluttered closed, my pulse thundering through my veins as
I waited and waited, desperate for the first crash of his mouth against mine.
All I felt was space between us, growing longer and wider until it
just wasn’t anymore—the first brush of his lips so soft, I wasn’t even sure
that I’d felt him. But Billy was there, his kiss as slow as his drawl, careful
and gentle, and little more than a sip of an ocean I was eager to disappear
into.
I took his jaw between my palms, prickly with stubble but sculptured
and strong. Drawing him down to me, I quickly melted into the shocking
plumpness of what I’d considered to be thin lips but now felt rich and deep,
and a whole new shade of delicious. Then he moaned, his hands squeezing
my waist and pressing me up into him. It was like embracing iron, rippled and
smooth, the bite of his buckle scraping my belly, and my hips pressing hungrily
toward the long, thick swell growing behind his zipper.
He took a needy gasp for air, and I hugged him closer, slipping my
tongue into his mouth. A growl churned from low in his throat as the kiss
turned dirtier, the strike of his tongue and bite of his lips getting
wonderfully sharp. But not sharp enough for what I wanted when my body was
catching fire everywhere he touched me: his wide palm secure on my lower back,
his other hand buried in my hair and massaging my scalp.
He felt so good, too good. And he hadn’t grabbed my ass once.
“You know”—I leaned back, my hand on his chest and Billy breathing
hard, blinking at me with his hands suspended in place—“you don’t kiss like a
bull rider.”
His brow furrowed, the slightest spark of suspicion in his eyes.
“How many bull riders you kissing?”
Nice.
“Hopefully none.”
He half rolled his eyes, but he was smiling again as he settled his
hands on my waist, his thumbs petting the space leading to my hips. All trace
of jealousy totally and completely gone, thank God. “All right, what do you got
against bull riders?”
I did my best to calm my libido—which wasn’t helped by tapping his
rock-solid chest with a single finger. But I wanted to set the record straight
before we stumbled into a problem. I was never going back to that life, not
when I had waited nine hours for Travis to wake up and not when I had been more
terrified than I knew a person could be when Jace was airlifted. “You put your
bull above everything else. And I’m telling you right now, Billy King, no
eight-second bull ride is ever going to come before me.”
Billy didn’t groan, didn’t flinch, didn’t blink. He just nodded.
“Okay.”
“I’m serious.”
Serious as Bonnie Landry’s black funeral dress and the poem she
brokenly read over Beau’s glistening coffin.
“Yeah?” Billy drawled, but his smile was clearly teasing as his
hands slid from my waist to lock somewhere over my lower back. He pulled me
closer until I was nearly gasping from the tease of his erection against my
hip, straining his zipper and parching my mouth. His eyebrow arched in the
picture of confidence, then he leaned down close enough to kiss me again,
whispering against my lips, “Good thing I’m not a bull rider no more…”
Good thing indeed.
***
Excerpted from
Fearless by Katie Golding. © 2020 by Katie Golding. Used with
permission of the publisher, Sourcebooks
Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. All rights reserved.
Glad you enjoyed!
ReplyDeleteHe sounds like a daredevil
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed the book. I did as well.
ReplyDeletesounds like a fun read
ReplyDeleteThis sounds fun.
ReplyDeleteNice review an thanks for the excerpt and giveaway.
ReplyDeleteGreat review!
ReplyDelete