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The Greek Tycoon's Inherited Bride by Lucy Monroe Phoebe's betrothal to Spiros Petronides' brother meant she was forbidden, and honor was the code the Greek billionaire lived by. But with one kiss Spiros knew he had to claim her as his! Back in the Spaniard's Bed by Trish Morey Leah left Alejandro Rodriguez because she'd overstepped the boundaries of a mistress and fallen in love! The Spaniard's arrogance angered her, but his touch ignited her. So when Alejandro storms back into her life, how can Leah deny him?
Argentinean wine tycoon Lucio Cruz is not expecting the call that summons him to his estranged wife's side. She's suffering a partial loss of memory, and Lucio discovers that she's returned to being the fiery, affectionate girl with whom he once eloped. Suddenly he can't resist her--but he knows he must. In just a few weeks, their divorce will be final.... Unless Ana can recall a secret that could change both their lives...
They're hot-blooded, exciting and very macho--an irresistible combination for any red-blooded gal! Join three lucky women who find sizzling passion and steamy sex in the arms of three irresistibly hot Latin lovers. Bundle includes The South American's Wife by Kay Thorpe, Bought by Her Latin Lover by Julia James and A Latin Passion by Kathryn Ross.
I thought it was blissful love… Was I nothing but a pawn? While traveling, Amy fell in love with and married Vincenzo, a sergeant from a prominent family in Venice. But the morning after their dreamy wedding night, everything quickly fell apart. Apparently, their marriage had just been a way for her husband to reclaim a ruby that had been handed down to him from his ancestors. Once she found out about this betrayal, Amy fled back to her hometown. Four years later, Amy is on her way to Venice again. This time to end her nightmarish marriage.
Marcello Mastroianni is considered by many to be the consummate symbol of Italian masculinity. In this work, Jacqueline Reich goes behind the popular image to reveal a figure at odds with and out of place in the unstable political, social and sexual climate of post-war Italy.
LuAnn Sparks and Joaquin Sandoval were childhood friends; his parents were employed by LuAnn's family. LuAnn, born to wealthy parents, marries well and leads a privileged lifestyle until she loses her husband and their money. Joaquin is a bad-boy, Harley-riding rebel whose clever invention makes him an overnight millionaire. Reunited after more than twenty-five years apart, they still care for each other. But LuAnn is trying to put her life back together. And Joaquin is determined to obtain custody of his eight-year-old daughter. Can an up-tight socialite and a tattooed-biker find a forever-after-kind of love and forge a new family together?
She’d take a good, cold beer over a hot guy most days of the week. Even better if it’s a beer she brewed. Reese Murphy, brewmaster at Rosalind Brewery in Asheville, enjoys quick, easy flings and hoppy IPAs. Men come in second behind running the brewery with her best friends. She didn’t ditch her decade-long career in chemistry to let anything, or anyone, distract her from perfecting her next award-winning beer. Until Eli. With his black-rimmed glasses and intriguing tattoos, their new accountant is the complete opposite of what she expects. Full of dark, brooding looks and sarcastic humor, even Eli's boring tax jargon sounds sexy. He's exactly the type of distraction she doesn't need, and exactly the type of man she wants. Living a solitary life suits accountant, Eli Montes. After his failing eyesight led to a broken engagement, Eli swore off deep, long-term commitments to women. And dating the owner of Rosalind Brewery, his newest client, doesn’t fit into the “just casual” category. But his first meeting with the gorgeous Reese throws Eli off-center. She’s different. The former chemist is sexy, exciting, and insanely smart. Still, no matter how perfect she seems, it won’t change his determination to stay away and stay single. It’s for her own good. Reese and Her Latin Lover, Book Two in the Rosalind Brewery Series, is a full-length romance novel full of laughter, sexy-bits with a foxy accountant, and a satisfying happily ever after. (Previously published as Reese.)
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN A GIRL ON THE FRINGE ENTERS THE REALM OF NEW YORK'S CHIC, PARTY-HOPPING ELITE? Soon after Bette Robinson quits her horrendous Manhattan banking job like the impulsive girl she's never been, the novelty of walking her four-pound dog around her unglamorous Murray Hill neighborhood wears as thin as the "What are you going to do with your life?" phone calls from her parents. Then Bette meets Kelly, head of Manhattan's hottest PR firm, and suddenly she has a brand-new job where the primary requirement is to see and be seen inside the VIP rooms of the city's most exclusive nightclubs. But when Bette begins appearing in a vicious new gossip column, she realizes that the line between her personal and professional life is...invisible.
Over the centuries, Latin love elegy has inspired love poetry in the West from Petrarch to Pound. A Latin Lover in Ancient Rome: Readings in Propertius and His Genre offers a critical reevaluation of the Latin elegiac poet Propertius, situating him within the social and political milieu of first-century BCE Rome. W. R. Johnson's study is centered on close readings of the poems in Propertius' four books that emphasize both his celebration of erotic freedom as a manifestation of the sovereignty of the individual and his insistence on the value of this freedom, especially when it is threatened by autocratic ideology. Many recent titles on Propertius have tended to minimize or ignore this aspect of the poet's work, concentrating instead on neo-formalism or Lacanian psychology. Johnson restores Propertius' erotic creed and his politics to the core of his poetics and his career. He offers a vivid picture of the sociopolitical and erotic world of the late Roman Republic and the early years of the Empire which hatched Latin love elegy and allowed it to flourish. This study aims to redirect attention to the pleasures and energies Propertius provides that later generations of poets and readers discovered in and through him.