Nobody But You
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
From New York Times bestselling author Jill Shalvis...
Sometimes You Can Go Home Again . . .
After an overseas mission goes wrong, Army Special Forces officer Jacob Kincaid knows where he must go to make things right: back home to the tiny town of Cedar Ridge, Colorado. All he needs to scrub away his painful past is fresh mountain air, a lakeside cabin, and quiet solitude. But what he discovers is a gorgeous woman living on a boat at his dock.
Sophie Marren has nowhere else to go. She's broke, intermittently seasick, and fighting a serious attraction to the brooding, dishy, I'm-too-sexy-for-myself guy who's now claiming her dock. Something about Jacob's dark intensity makes her want to tease-and tempt-him beyond measure. Neither one wants to give any ground . . . until they realize the only true home they have is with each other.
Customer Reviews
I've fallen in love with the Kincaid family
Jacob's come home to his lovably interfering family but no part of coming back has been easy. Almost ten years ago words were said in anger between him and his twin brother and they've been left to fester since then. Both Jacob and Hudson are older, and hopefully wiser now, and that ugly past can be laid to rest, and Jacob welcomed back into the arms of the Kincaid family. Sophie's had the rug pulled right out from under her. Finally getting free from her cheating ex husband and the only thing she has to show for it, other than lots of life experience, is a boat she hates. A boat she only keeps because her ex adored it. A boat that puts her on a collision course with Jacob Kincaid. I love that we get to see lots of interaction between our hero and heroine, but I've fallen in love with the rest of the Kincaid family of the previous two books and would really have liked to see more of them in this one. It always makes me chuckle in malicious glee when our hero and heroine start out the book with every intention to keep it light with no big emotions involved; certainly not the dreaded "L" word. Because, to my vindictive delight, it always backfires on them. I quite enjoyed watching Jacob and Sophie confront their feelings for one another and their own self-limiting beliefs. Both of them were packing around a bunch of heavy baggage they needed to unpack and heal from. Each other just might be the perfect prescription for that healing.