She has a checklist.
He's checking her out.
Should Megan add taking a leap with a younger man to her to-dos?
Single mom Megan LaSorda can''t decide which is more distracting, the box of vintage confession magazines from the 1980s she discovers while clearing out her parents’ garage, or the sizzling hot moving guy she’s supposed to supervise. Graduate student Nico Galianakos turns out to be more than a man with a truck and strong arms. He’s a connection from her past who’s grown up to be a very sexy package, and he's looking at Megan with a lot more than friendliness.
Suddenly a day that promised to be hard, sweaty work is filled with sneak-reading smutty articles that begin ‘Dear Editor, I’ve been very bad, please help me stop’ and end with more fun than Megan's had in months. The all-work single mom realizes her own version of a letter would begin, "Dear Editor, I've been very boring. Please help me get a life." The more articles she reads, the more Megan doesn’t want to stop locking gazes with Nico. Doesn't want to stop imagining them together. Doesn't want to watch him drive his truck away at the end of the day.
He keeps promising that he's a full-service moving man, and she needs a time out for fun.
Should she go for it?
This is an extremely high heat, very low-angst, low-conflict contemporary romance for readers who want a night of escapism from the lists, chores, jobs, texts, kids, parents, internet, dishes, and plain old stuff cluttering their brains and lives. Service Included ends with a Happy-For-Now that feels authentic to these two characters. All of this, with a bonus Eighties flair!
Service Included kicks off the "Dear Editor, I've Been Bad" series, five novels linked by women who are inspired after reading steamy letters to the editor printed in a vintage 1980s confession magazine. This book has the highest steam-to-plot ratio of the series, so some readers might want to let that guide their starting point. Each book can be read as a standalone, but reading this one first reveals how copies of the magazines find their way to the other characters.
Anna Richland is the award-winning author of His Road Home, which Publishers Weekly called "Tantalizing" and the review site Smart B*tches, Trashy Books said was "So freaking romantic I could pass out."
Genre: Romance
He's checking her out.
Should Megan add taking a leap with a younger man to her to-dos?
Single mom Megan LaSorda can''t decide which is more distracting, the box of vintage confession magazines from the 1980s she discovers while clearing out her parents’ garage, or the sizzling hot moving guy she’s supposed to supervise. Graduate student Nico Galianakos turns out to be more than a man with a truck and strong arms. He’s a connection from her past who’s grown up to be a very sexy package, and he's looking at Megan with a lot more than friendliness.
Suddenly a day that promised to be hard, sweaty work is filled with sneak-reading smutty articles that begin ‘Dear Editor, I’ve been very bad, please help me stop’ and end with more fun than Megan's had in months. The all-work single mom realizes her own version of a letter would begin, "Dear Editor, I've been very boring. Please help me get a life." The more articles she reads, the more Megan doesn’t want to stop locking gazes with Nico. Doesn't want to stop imagining them together. Doesn't want to watch him drive his truck away at the end of the day.
He keeps promising that he's a full-service moving man, and she needs a time out for fun.
Should she go for it?
This is an extremely high heat, very low-angst, low-conflict contemporary romance for readers who want a night of escapism from the lists, chores, jobs, texts, kids, parents, internet, dishes, and plain old stuff cluttering their brains and lives. Service Included ends with a Happy-For-Now that feels authentic to these two characters. All of this, with a bonus Eighties flair!
Service Included kicks off the "Dear Editor, I've Been Bad" series, five novels linked by women who are inspired after reading steamy letters to the editor printed in a vintage 1980s confession magazine. This book has the highest steam-to-plot ratio of the series, so some readers might want to let that guide their starting point. Each book can be read as a standalone, but reading this one first reveals how copies of the magazines find their way to the other characters.
Anna Richland is the award-winning author of His Road Home, which Publishers Weekly called "Tantalizing" and the review site Smart B*tches, Trashy Books said was "So freaking romantic I could pass out."
Genre: Romance
Used availability for Anna Richland's Service Included
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