Ratings12
Average rating3.8
Farmers make the earth move. The last person Griffin Shipley expects to find stuck in a ditch on his Vermont country road is his ex-hookup. Five years ago they'd shared a couple of steamy nights together. But that was a lifetime ago. At twenty-seven, Griff is now the accidental patriarch of his family farm. Even his enormous shoulders feel the strain of supporting his mother, three siblings and a dotty grandfather. He doesn't have time for the sorority girl who's shown up expecting to buy his harvest at half price. Vermont was never in Audrey Kidder's travel plans. Neither was Griff Shipley. But she needs a second chance with the restaurant conglomerate employing her. Okay-a fifth chance. And no self-righteous lumbersexual farmer will stand in her way. They're adversaries. They want entirely different things from life. Too bad their sexual chemistry is as hot as Audrey's top secret enchilada sauce, and then some. Warning: Contains sexual situations, gourmet yumminess, a steamy outdoor shower and proof that farmers don't mind getting dirty.
Series
8 primary booksTrue North is a 8-book series with 8 primary works first released in 31 with contributions by Sarina Bowen and Clara Valmont.
Series
1 primary bookLe Grand Nord Tome 1 : Amertume (Episodes) is a 0-book series first released in 2016 with contributions by Sarina Bowen.
Reviews with the most likes.
Loved this.
Everything a rollicking good romance should be.
A sexy, gruff hero in Griff, and a feisty, bold heroine in Audrey.
Their interactions burned up the pages, plus she's a chef and I'm a foodie so I loved the references!
Recommend if you enjoy romance.
3.5, rounding down because I'm not a fan of first-person in romance, especially when the MC keeps referring to her “lady parts” or “girl parts” in her internal monologue. Like, you're not 12 and neither is the reader, and if we can have detailed descriptions of the lead dude's junk, let's stop with the cutesy talk, please.
Anyway. I wasn't sure I was going to like this at first, what with the alternating first-person and just how much of a jerk the hero was in the beginning, but once it got past that, it grew on me nicely and I learned some interesting things about apples. I might go back and read the rest of this series, because I really do like the setting, and most of the other potential leads mentioned in the story don't seem like they'd start off as grumpy as Griff.
(2019 summer romance bingo: “wine and spirits”; don't think it'd fit any other square except HEA.)
I've been trying to read this book for a long time but I kept picking it up and putting it down. There wasn't anything that really hooked me to the story and I didn't think it got particularly interesting until almost the end. I am looking forward to reading about the rest of the Shipley family.
Woman with excellent chef skills and ambitions to own a restaurant, with an awful mother, and trust issues, works for an unpleasant restaurant business. On a business trip into the countryside, she meets a handsome cider-making farmer, with whom she had a very brief fling in college. His family immediately love her and her cooking. The usual romance stuff ensues. It passed the time, was inoffensive and instantly forgettable.