Showing posts with label Ruthie Knox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ruthie Knox. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Series Review: Camelot Series (1-4) by Ruthie Knox



How to Misbehave: A Novella: Camelot Series                                                                                                                                                                            Series: Camelot #1
Series: Camelot #1
Genre: Contemp  Romance
Publisher: Loveswept
Publication Date: 1/28/13
Format: Purchase
Pages: 96
Source: Publisher
Rating: 4 stars


GoodReads  |  Amazon  |  B&N 


What woman can resist a hot man in a hard hat? Beloved author Ruthie Knox kicks off her new Camelot series with this deliciously sexy original novella, in which a good girl learns how to misbehave . . . with all her heart.


As program director for the Camelot Community Center, Amber Clark knows how to keep her cool. That is, until a sudden tornado warning forces her to take shelter in a darkened basement with a hunk of man whose sex appeal green lights her every fantasy. With a voice that would melt chocolate, he asks her if she is okay. Now she's hot all over and wondering: How does a girl make a move?


Building contractor Tony Mazzara was just looking to escape nature's fury. Instead, he finds himself all tangled up with lovely Amber. Sweet and sexy, she's ready to unleash her wild side. Their mutual desire reaches a fever pitch and creates a storm of its own--unexpected, powerful, and unforgettable. But is it bigger than Tony can handle? Can he let go of painful memories and let the force of this remarkable woman show him a future he never dreamed existed?

My Thoughts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Review: Truly (New York #1) by Ruthie Knox

Truly (The New York Series): A Loveswept Contemporary Romance
Series: New York #1
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Series: New York #1
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Loveswept
Publication Date: 8/5/14
Format: eARC
Pages: 304
Source: Publisher
Rating: 5 stars


GoodReads  |  Amazon  |  B&N
 


RITA finalist and USA Today bestselling author Ruthie Knox kicks off a steamy new series set in the city that never sleeps—alone, at least.
 

May Fredericks hates New York. Which is fair enough, since New York seems to hate her back. After relocating to Manhattan from the Midwest to be with her long-distance boyfriend, NFL quarterback Thor Einarsson, May receives the world’s worst marriage proposal, stabs the jerk with a shrimp fork, and storms off alone—only to get mugged. Now she’s got no phone, no cash, and no friends. How’s a nice girl supposed to get back to safe, sensible Wisconsin?  
 
 
Frankly, Ben Hausman couldn’t care less. Sure, it’s not every day he meets a genuine, down-to-earth woman like May—especially in a dive in the Village—but he’s recovering from an ugly divorce that cost him his restaurant. He wants to be left alone to start over and become a better man. Then again, playing the white knight to May’s sexy damsel in distress would be an excellent place to start—if only he can give her one very good reason to love New York.

My Review
 
Here's the short-and-sweet of it...
 
I loved Truly. The probability was high given that I'm a fan of Ruthie Knox. There was so many thing about this book that appealed to me. We get great leading characters on Ben and May. May is get a tall, easy-going woman who stabbed her pro-football player boyfriend with a fork, left their home and got robbed. Our guy Ben, is a bee-keeper/farmer who's soon-to-be homeless and has anger-control issues. They sound like a perfect pair, yeah? Well, they are. Determined to make May fall in love with NYC over Labor Day weekend, Ben helps May find the vibrant, beautiful, assertive woman within. May sees Ben as not the angry, aggressive man he thinks he is, but a  man with real childhood issues and who's looking for happiness in the wrong places.

 Knox did a fantastic job with the setting. I left Truly feeling as if I'd actually been in NYC. The characters' passion for and beer appealed to me, too. In addition to setting, Knox is pretty brilliant with the finer details as far as non-verbal cues: the press of lips against skin, the grip of fingers on hips, thrusts, pulls, bites...it all makes for a heady experience.

 True to form for Knox, Truly was an insightful, sexy, romantic story. I loved the setting, the characters, conflicts, and the journey to the HEA. This one may even top About a Last Night as my favorite Ruthie Knox book. I'm hoping Madly will be about May's sister, Allie, who had a great secondary story.
 
If you're looking to expand your Ruthie Knox reading list, or if you want to give her a first try, I highly recommend Truly.


Quick side note: I loved that May was a tall woman who had long-standing issues with that. Being pretty much the same size as May's described as, I heavily identified with her. Always feeling self-conscious, apologetic, and like a oaf in a world of 5'2 women. I loved Ben's no-nonsense take on the situation (one my own husband has expressed since I met him): "I don't have an opinion on your height." "Don't apologize for being tall. You're fucking perfect." Whether you're tall or not, a lot of us have some issue. These word were a much-needed reminded that you don't have to apologize for not being perfect, and that it is okay to just be.
 
Favorite Quotes
 
 
  "New York thinks you need a vacation here, and it's not letting you go until you give it a few more days to change your mind about it."
  May looked at her shoes, the smile still lingering. "If New York wants to woo me, it shouldn't be such a dick."
 
 
  This isn't me, a voice whispered in her head. But of course it was. These were the choices she got to make.... Whether to tease Ben, to climb on top of his lap and kiss him, to sleep in his bed. Whether to go after what she wanted, sex or authenticity or truth--even if it turned out to be both disgusting and amazing, scary and essential.  
  These were her decisions and nobody else's.
 
 
  For two steps, she watched him go. Three. Her heart squeezed hard, her inner asshole chastising her, stupid, stupid, and then it happened all at once. A bright flash of anger-at herself, at every movie and TV show and magazine, every insidious cultural message that had ever told her that her body sucked.  
  It was all a bunch of lies,and she knew that. She knew it.But here she was, letting it ruin everything.
 
 

About Ruthie Knox
 
Ruthie KnoxUSA Today bestselling author Ruthie Knox writes contemporary romance that’s sexy, witty, and angsty—sometimes all three at once. Her debut novel, Ride with Me, is probably the only existing cross-country bicycling love story. She followed it up with About Last Night, a London-set romance whose hero has the unlikely name of Neville, and then Room at the Inn, a Christmas novella—both of which were finalists for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA Award. Her four-book series about the Clark family of Camelot, Ohio, has won accolades for its fresh, funny portrayal of small-town Midwestern life. Ruthie also writes New Adult romance as RobinYork. She moonlights as a mother, Tweets incessantly, and bakes a mean focaccia. She’d love to hear from you, so feel free to drop her a line.







 photo AndreaSig_zps3f75055b.jpg

Friday, July 11, 2014

Sexy Saturdays: Ride With Me/About Last Night by Ruthie Knox




 

Sexy Saturdays with Andrea and Autumn is a weekly feature created to spread the word about spicy reads.


The Bookish Babe
 
 

Ride with MeSeries: Standalone
Genre: Contemp Romance
Publisher: Loveswept
Publication Date: 2/13/13
Format: ebook
Pages: 216
Source: Purchase
Rating: 4 stars


In this fun, scorching-hot eBook original romance by Ruthie Knox, a cross-country bike adventure takes a detour into unexplored passion. As readers will discover, Ride with Me is not about the bike!   
 
When Lexie Marshall places an ad for a cycling companion, she hopes to find someone friendly and fun to cross the TransAmerica Trail with. Instead, she gets Tom Geiger—a lean, sexy loner whose bad attitude threatens to spoil the adventure she’s spent years planning.  
 
Roped into the cycling equivalent of a blind date by his sister, Tom doesn’t want to ride with a chatty, go-by-the-map kind of woman, and he certainly doesn’t want to want her. Too bad the sight of Lexie with a bike between her thighs really turns his crank.   Even Tom’s stubborn determination to keep Lexie at a distance can’t stop a kiss from leading to endless nights of hotter-than-hot sex. But when the wild ride ends, where will they go next? 
 
 
My Review
 
I've recently taken a big liking to books from Ruthie Knox, so when I saw Let It Ride, I had to give it a try. I'm not particularly into cycling. My own bike has who-knows-how-many gears/speeds and hasn't moved in over two years. But I'm always looking out for something new, and book about two strangers on a cross-country cycling trip sounded all kinds of cool and interesting.


I was fully prepared to like Tom despite the cycling gear. To be honest, I've never noticed a cyclist and thought "Hey! He's hot." Compression shorts do nothing for me. But to Alex's dismay, and my utter delight, it seems that Tom sets out wearing a faded Nirvana t-shirt and cargo shorts. That sound you just heard was my lady-bells ringing. Guys, I love a guy in a good tee and cargoes. But then...Tom started speaking, and dude, that man was a little hostile. Nice. As anyone who knows my husband can vouch for, I love a cranky man. Tom Geiger, he was a solitary man with a difficult past. Over the past five years, he's completely transformed his life, going from a high-powered job to working in a bike shop, from a socially active life to solitude. I mean, the guy has pretty much modeled his new life after Thoreau's "Walden", with epic cycling trips his only true indulgence.

So Tom is tricked into riding cross-country with Alex "Lexie" Marshall, and he isn't a bit happy about that. Lexie isn't exactly thrilled to be riding with Grumpy Tom, but, she's out of options. Le xie and Tom are opposites: she's chatty, curious, excited, and she is way too organized for Tom's liking. She's outfitted with a ridiculously complicated bike complete with a computer, maps, a trailer...she's so ready for this trip. But what Tom realizes and Lexi does not, is that she needs to get rid of the gear and just enjoy the beautiful ride.

Oh! Another issue that drives Tom crazy? He's wildly attracted to Lexie. He has no need for that sort of nonsense in his life, though, and vows to keep his hands off. The only problem is, her ass looks so nice when she's riding in front of him, she looks hot with a bike between her thighs, he can't help but admire the freckles on her shoulder, etc. Yep, he's got it bad.And so does Lexie. Did I mention Tom is hot? He is, with dark good looks, broad shoulders, muscular thighs, and enticing scent. You see where this is going, don't you? Tom and Lexi want each other, so badly. But neither wants to want the other. They have specific plans that don't include falling in love on the TransAmerica Trail. Which means, they absolutely fall in love on the TransAmerica Trail, one hill, one town, one longing glance at a time.

Let It Ride was sexy, it was interesting, it was meaningful and it made me smile. Another winner from Ruthie Knox.

Favorite Quotes
 
 
  "I don't need a babysitter."
  "Please, Tom. You can't ride your bicycle across the country alone. It's insane. You'll end up being slaughtered by a serial killer."
"Taryn, I'm thiry-five, single, tattooed, and antisocial.
I'm the serial killer.”
 
 
  He was everything she wanted.
  For a long moment he just held her there, his tattooed biceps rigid with the strain of bearing his own weight, his breath on her neck, his heat pulsing deep inside her, his heart beating so hard she could feel it pounding against her own.
  She tipped her hips up, inviting him deeper, and he groaned helplessly. "God, Lex. Tell me this is really okay."
  "It's better than okay."
  "You're mine." He said it like an oath, both a curse and a promise.
  She liked the sound of that.
 
  Lying here naked beside Tom, watching the weather arrive, it was hard to remember Portland or to formulate an acceptable explanation for why she wasn't married and living an entirely different life. She wasn't doing that because she'd wanted to be here, doing this. She'd wanted Tom before she'd even met him.

 
About Last Night
Series: Standalone
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Series: Standalone
Genre: Contemporary Romance 
Publisher: Random House
Publication Date: 6/11/12
Format: ebook
Pages: 207
Source: Purchase
Rating: 4.5 stars
 
GoodReads  |  Amazon  |  B&N 


NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

Sure, opposites attract, but in this sexy, smart, eBook original romance from RITA finalist and bestselling author Ruthie Knox, they positively combust! When a buttoned-up banker falls for a bad girl, “about last night” is just the beginning.

 
Cath Talarico knows a mistake when she makes it, and God knows she’s made her share. So many, in fact, that this Chicago girl knows London is her last, best shot at starting over. But bad habits are hard to break, and soon Cath finds herself back where she has vowed never to go . . . in the bed of a man who is all kinds of wrong: too rich, too classy, too uptight for a free-spirited troublemaker like her.

Nev Chamberlain feels trapped and miserable in his family’s banking empire. But beneath his pinstripes is an artist and bohemian struggling to break free and lose control. Mary Catherine—even her name turns him on—with her tattoos, her secrets, and her gamine, sex-starved body, unleashes all kinds of fantasies.

When blue blood mixes with bad blood, can a couple that is definitely wrong for each other ever be perfectly right? And with a little luck and a lot of love, can they make last night last a lifetime?

 
My Review
 
I went into About Last Night with expectations of a fun one-night stand turned true love story. Since it's a Ruthie Knox book, I also knew that buried beneath the sexy cover and fun premise, I would get a truly meaningful story that would grip me. I was right about that. Not only did About Last Night grip me, it  kicked me straight in the heart. I will  keep my personal reflection on the story to a minimum, but let me just say that, like Ashley from Roman Holiday, About Last Night's heroine spoke to me on a deeply personal level.

The story begins with Cath, an American living in London. Though she has a job she loves, Cath remains detached. You soon learn it's for her own good. Cath hasn't always been responsible, hard-working. She used to be "Old Cath", and that version of her was deeply troubled. When Cath connects with a man she knows from the train, a sexy man she nicknames "City" (his real name is Nev), Cath knows she's going down the wrong path again, headed for a mistake. But Nev, he refuses to let Cath walk away. He wants to know her, love her. Nev is in for quite the battle.
 
Much of About Last Night deals with Nev's persistence and Cath's reluctance for a relationship. As stubborn as she is, he matches her step-for-step. It's a one-step-forward, two-steps-back sort of dance between these two. I confess, it normally drives me a bit bananas when a character decides to leave the person they love or shut them out "for their own good". Cath is afraid her penchant for destroying her life will crash down on Nev, and that he'll break her heart. She's partially right, in that her former life could be overwhelming, but we know that Nev is a big boy, and if you love someone, give them the knowledge and a choice, and allow that person to decide whether you're worth the risk. This is her choice, whether to take the risk and let Nev break her heart, as she believes he will

But honestly, I can also see why Cath is so private and protective of herself. I know that Nev loves her and would never hurt her, but she doesn't. Sometimes our own awful, stupid mistakes build and build and build until that's all we can see, it becomes ingrained into our identity. Until you let someone in, tell that person your big bad secrets. If that person truly loves you, they'll accept it as part of your history, what led you to where you are and exactly who you need to be. And then, that person can show you who they see you as, not flawless, but strong, a survivor.
 
  "Your past--It's not a series of mistakes, love. It's just you. All the things that happened to you that made you who you are. You asked me if I hated you for what you've done and what you've been through, but I never could. I admire you. I love you. And I wouldn't change any of it, even the worst parts, because I wouldn't change a thing about you."


And Nev, what a dream book guy! So kind, so sexy, so funny and smirky. I love how much he loved Cath, just as she was. And let me say, that man can make a grand gesture. Truly stunning.
 
I know this review has been all over the place and a real angst-fest. But I must point out that About Last Night was really funny and sexy too. I love the humor and realism when it comes to sex Knox always incorporates into her stories. I don't need to be sold the fantasy when I have this level of honesty and beauty.
 
About Last Night. A bad girl and a buttoned-up banker. Blue blood and bad blood. This book was practically written for the bad girl who still lives somewhere inside of me. That girl with good intentions and bad decisions who never thought she would not only win the heart of the good guy, but that through his eyes, she could see that maybe she hadn't made a disaster of things after all. It's not about being changed about a person, but about seeing yourself through new eyes, a new, love-filled perspective. It's very healing and very endearing. I just, I loved this story so much and highly recommend it.
 

Favorite Quotes
 
  "I would appreciate it," he said after a moment, "if you would stop calling me 'nice.'"
  He took a step closer, and her heart rate spiked.
  "You are nice." Her voice came out all weak and wavery. This was how Little Red Riding Hood had felt when she'd discovered the Big Bad Wolf wearing Grandma's bonnet.
  "No," he replied. "I'm not."
 
  He was claiming her, marking her with his touch, but she didn’t feel possessed so much as she felt protected. Cherished. Wanted. The unaccustomed intimacy of it rendered her fragile, vulnerable as a robin’s egg. Somehow with him it was all right. He wouldn’t take advantage. City was one of the good guys.
 
 
  He saw her. He saw her, and then he smiled the way he'd always smiled at her, as if they were the only two people in the room, and he loved her, and he'd very much life to find out what she had on under her dress. That shark smile. That Big Bad Wolf grin. It got to her like nothing else ever had or ever would.
 
 

About Ruthie Knox

Ruthie Knox
                                                                                                                                                         USA Today bestselling author Ruthie Knox writes contemporary romance that’s sexy, witty, and angsty—sometimes all three at once. Her debut novel, Ride with Me, is probably the only existing cross-country bicycling love story. She followed it up with About Last Night, a London-set romance whose hero has the unlikely name of Neville, and then Room at the Inn, a Christmas novella—both of which were finalists for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA Award. Her four-book series about the Clark family of Camelot, Ohio, has won accolades for its fresh, funny portrayal of small-town Midwestern life. Ruthie also writes New Adult romance as RobinYork. She moonlights as a mother, Tweets incessantly, and bakes a mean focaccia. She’d love to hear from you, so feel free to drop her a line.



 



 photo AndreaSig_zps3f75055b.jpg

Friday, May 23, 2014

SEXY SATURDAYS: ROMAN HOLIDAY: THE COMPLETE ADVENTURE by RUTHIE KNOX

 
Sexy Saturdays with Andrea and Autumn is a weekly feature created to spread the word about spicy reads.
 

Participating blogs:


Roman Holiday: The Complete Adventure (Roman Holiday, #1-10)
Series: The Complete Adventure, 1-10
Genre: Contemporary Romance
Publisher: Loveswept
Publication Date: 3/25/14
Format: eARC
Pages:  512
Source: Publisher
Rating: 5 stars


GoodReads  |  Amazon  |  B&N  |  iBooks

The wait is over with this eBook bundle that includes all ten episodes of Ruthie Knox’s steamy, irresistible serial, Roman Holiday. Like all the greatest road trips, Ashley and Roman’s journey is full of unforgettable twists and turns. But what’s their final destination?

EPISODE 1: CHAINED
EPISODE 2: HITCHED
EPISODE 3: BLINDSIDED
EPISODE 4: RAVAGED
EPISODE 5: IGNITED
EPISODE 6: MISTAKEN
EPISODE 7: RENOUNCED
EPISODE 8: STRIPPED
EPISODE 9: TRANSFORMED
EPISODE 10: CLAIMED

Ashley Bowman has always been impetuous, but even she is a little shocked when she chains herself to a palm tree in the Florida Keys hours before a hurricane is due to blow in. It’s all with the hope of saving her childhood home from a heartless Miami developer. But the moment she meets Roman Díaz she realizes he does have a heart—it’s just encased in ice. Ashley’s determined to get Roman to crack . . . even if she has to drag him all over the eastern seaboard to do it.

Roman can hardly believe he’s been talked into driving across the country with this brazen wild child in a skimpy bikini. He tells himself he had no choice—Ashley insists he meets the elderly snowbirds whose community will be displaced by his career-making development deal. But in truth he knows that there’s something about Ashley that makes him want to get a little wild himself . . . and the closer they get, the more tempted he becomes.

Ruthie Knox is an author who's been on my radar for several months now. I've discover (or been recommended) towards a set of authors in the past six months, a set of authors whose works I have enjoyed immensely. One thing these authors all seem to have in common, besides huge talent, is Ruthie Knox. They thank her for her help and praise her work. But what made me fall in love with Knox's writing, despite having never read her books, was this post on Writing Reality. When I read this post, and all the comments, I thought "THIS is the type of romance I want to read." (also I'm not ashamed to admit that every time I've read the post, I love it even more) I've picked up several of her books recently, and when the Roman Holiday serial was released in one large collection, I decided to go for it.

When Ashley Bowman refuses to let Roman Diaz destroy her grandmother's home, the two are set up in a battle for control. An agreement places and continues to keep them in close proximity. Along the way, a fantastic array of secondary characters, friends of Ashley's and her grsndmother's, help us see Ashley, her grandmother and Sunnyvale, through their lens. I thought I knew what I was getting into with Roman Holiday. I was all "An angry man and a free-spirited woman, opposites attract. Yay!" And "A fun adventure story with loads of sexual tension. I want!" Roman Holiday was all of those things. But it was also an insightful story of two people who didn't know they were lost until they found each other.

Roman Diaz is a controlled and calm man. Perfectly put together, mannered, respected. This appearance is his armor. As the story unfolds, we begin to see cracks in that armor, glimpses of the former Roman he's worked hard to put away. The boy no one wanted with a tragic childhood, fthe young man who remade himself to earn respect and a place in the world. There's a latent anger to Roman. It's so barely contained at times that he can hardly hold back. No one has picked at that control, ever, like Ashley.

  He wanted to take her by the wrist and pull her out of the store, flatten her against the succo outside and press right up against her, get right in her face and insist, insist, that she tell him everything about the trip she had planned. That she stop teasing him and taunting him and leading him around as though he were harmless as a pony on a rope.
  He wasn't a fucking pony. He was a tiger. He would claw her and eat her. He'd rebel against her, and she wouldn't even see it coming.


And at the same time, Ashley intrigues Roman. He admires her passion and conviction.

Ashley seems to be Roman's direct opposite, and for a few reasons. She is messy, uninhibited, prone to rambling chats, and I identified with her in a way I rarely do with heroines. Ashley appears to be a free spirit, and to a large extent she is. But as you get to know Ashley, it seems that instead of being free, she's directionless. She's the child of self-centered, distant parents. Her greatest comfort was her grandmother, who's actions before her death have left her feeling confused and betrayed.No one takes Ashley seriously, believes in her strength. No one taught her how to love, how to accept only the best for herself.

  What kind of friends--what kind of family--had allowed that to happen? Someone should have stopped it. Forced naïve Ashley to come home, sleep in her bed, act her age. But no one had.
  Not her father, who'd sent her to live with his mother because he couldn't figure out any other way to handle her.
  Not her grandmother, who'd liked to say, Live and let live. Everyone has to make their own mistakes.
  Ashley made plenty. That's why she was here. Her whole reason for this detour to Ohio was to draw on Nana's strength. But when Nana gripped her shoulder and Carly touched her knew, their touches made Ashley want to curl in on herself.
  "It's not supposed to be funny," she said. It's my life."


As they go on this quest, Roman and Ashley seem to drive each other crazy. Roman's distance and cold remarks hurt Ashley, though she tries to hide it well. Her free nature and refusal to play to Roman's control issues drive him make him insane. His loss of control, at her hands, humiliates him, makes him angry angry angry. But the thing is, it only makes them crazy or hurts because it makes them feel so much, when they've both closed down to the hurt they've lived with for so long. The trip is full of  problems and roadblocks, often hilarious and cringe-worthy. These problems break them down, and the vulnerabilities come out, allowing Roman and Ashley open up. They give each other so much, and as they get to know each other, Roman begins to believe in Ashley. In her strengths and passions. Ashley gives Roman acceptance of his bizarre and sad past. She gives him erratic conversations and laughter, smiles.

  "You know I like you, right?"
  Her smile turned into a grin. Sunlight and gold, and those bluer-than-blue eyes looking up at him. "Yeah, but I could stand to hear it again."
  He couldn't help it. She made him grin. He'd never met another woman who could do that--who did it as effortlessly as she pulled air out of her lungs.


And of course, there is a heavy, achy sexual tension between these two. I loved the rawness Knox gave to these moments. I could see the corded tension in Roman's body, the grit in his jaw as he tried to resist fantasizing about Ashley in the next room. Roman Holiday is definitely a slow burn on the physical front, but it was so worth it.

Roman and Ashley together, it's kind of magical, in that way only love can achieve. For the first time in their lives, each is truly being seen. It is so, so very uplifting and happy-making when you have a love story with two people who bring each other pieces so vitally needed, who make each other feel stronger, valued, and seen.

Roman Holiday was a quest story, a quest honestly, for both Ashley and Roman. And yes, their destination is ultimately a wonderful place to land, but like all good quests, the journey, the discoveries along the way, are the real story.




Favorite Quotes

  "Right. Turn over, then." His mouth caressed her cheek, the rasp of his skin sweet and intimate. "I want to see your face."
  She turned, surprised because her eyes were misty, tears close. She felt as though she'd spent every day for years and years in layers of padding, gauze-wrapped, and Roman had just yanked hard on the loose end and sent her spinning around, a dizzying whirl that left her bare, her skin tender, her heart open.
  I want to see your face. 
   Who had ever said that to her before? No one, her mind whispered. No one but him.



About the author

Ruthie KnoxUSA Today bestselling author Ruthie Knox writes contemporary romance that’s sexy, witty, and angsty—sometimes all three at once. Her debut novel, Ride with Me, is probably the only existing cross-country bicycling love story. She followed it up with About Last Night, a London-set romance whose hero has the unlikely name of Neville, and then Room at the Inn, a Christmas novella—both of which were finalists for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA Award. Her four-book series about the Clark family of Camelot, Ohio, has won accolades for its fresh, funny portrayal of small-town Midwestern life. Ruthie also writes New Adult romance as RobinYork. She moonlights as a mother, Tweets incessantly, and bakes a mean focaccia. She’d love to hear from you, so feel free to drop her a line.










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