Author: Alyssa Cole
Series Reluctant Royals
Genre Adult Contemporary Romance
Publisher Avon Impulse
Publication Date January 8, 2018
While her boss the prince was busy wooing his
betrothed, Likotsi had her own love affair after swiping right on a dating app.
But her romance had ended in heartbreak, and now, back in NYC again, she’s
determined to rediscover her joy—so of course she runs into the woman who broke
her heart.
When Likotsi and Fabiola meet again on a
stalled subway train months later, Fab asks for just one cup of tea. Likotsi,
hoping to know why she was unceremoniously dumped, agrees. Tea and food soon
leads to them exploring the city together, and their past, with Fab slowly
revealing why she let Likotsi go, and both of them wondering if they can turn
this second chance into a happily ever after.
Once Ghosted, Twice Shy is a novella in the Reluctant Royals series. It's the first I have read out of the series, but it works pretty well as a stand alone. Likotsi is back in the US with her boss and a chance meeting with Fabiola, the woman who ghosted her months before, sets her world on edge.
I thought this was a cute second chance novella. By spending the day together, Likotsi is able to look back at their whirlwind romance and figure out the truth of why Fab ended things. I liked the ending. We get flashbacks which help the reader to see that they did have chemistry. I only wish that the book had been longer. I wanted to get to know each of the women more. Likotsi felt very bland, like she had no personality. I'm not sure if it was cultural, but it was kind of hard to see how a fun and free spirited woman like Fab would fall for someone like Likotsi. Maybe in the first book, her personality comes across clearer. I'll have to go back and read it to find out. At any rate, I did warm up to her in the end.
Buy links:
Amazon https://amzn.to/2rjkk3F
Avon Romance https://goo.gl/BC7cj3
Barnes & Noble https://goo.gl/Wrgf8o
Google Play https://goo.gl/59jPBP
iBooks https://apple.co/2EchsxI
Enjoy this excerpt:
“Attention, passengers, we apologize for the delay.” The MTA
conductor’s voice was tinny, but the exasperation rang clear as the voice
fuzzed through the speakers in the stalled subway car. “We are being held
momentarily by the train’s dispatcher due to a malfunctioning signal. Or
something. Thank you for your patience. We will be moving shortly. Maybe.”
Likotsi Adelele, mother of schedules and slayer of
inefficiencies, would usually have been quite annoyed with her train being
stuck on a bridge for half an hour with no explanation, but it was a special
day: she had off from work. The full weekend! Two days to herself, a reprieve
from managing meetings with dignitaries, heads of states, and business
interests; planning royal dinners, royal date nights, and royal relaxation; and
overseeing most aspects of the life of His Royal Highness, Bringer of Light and
Love, Prince Thabiso Moshoeshoe of Thesolo, currently situated in Manhattan.
Or
more time to think about her.
Likotsi tugged at the thigh of her trousers—teal gabardine
with a matching blazer—before crossing her leg so that an ankle rested over her
opposite knee, exposing bright yellow socks. She brushed away a speck of dirt
that had lodged in one of the diamond-shaped perforations that decorated the
aged tan leather of her new brogues. Her father had mailed her the shoes a few
weeks back, a Christmas present to go under the giant fir tree lodged into a
corner of the royal townhouse, since Naledi enjoyed partaking in Christian
holidays. When Likotsi had finally been allowed to open the package, held
hostage until four am on December 25 by an ever vigilant Naledi, she’d
discovered a note inside: New shoes point
toward the future, sweet daughter. You cannot keep wearing that which you have
outgrown.
Likotsi had slipped the note and the shoes into her closet
for the two weeks following the holiday. Today she would break them in, walking
away from memories that should’ve evaporated long ago but had left residual
damage, like stains on suede after a sudden downpour.
She winced as the conductor made another announcement, this
one completely unintelligible static.
A train delay was fine. A train delay was delightful. Anything she encountered
this weekend would be delightful because she was tired of the dejection that had
nagged at her for months. Dejection was inefficient, and worse, it was
pedestrian. Moping and wallowing had left a green tinge on the memories of her
few perfect days in New York the previous spring, like the band of a fake gold
ring. It was time to leave the shoes she had outgrown behind.
It was time to create new memories.
As far as interminable train delays went, being stuck on the
Manhattan Bridge on a Saturday morning was about as good as one could get.
Outside the window of the train, the January sunlight was dappling over the
choppy, ice-strewn waves of the East River, tinting the muddy waters a silvery
green-gold. The cold blue of the morning sky seemed endless as it stretched out
over Brooklyn on one side and Manhattan on the other, holding all the promise
of the recently arrived New Year.
A week before, Likotsi had watched the ball drop from the
apartment of a translator she’d met at the UN. As she’d walked home, surrounded
by drunken revelers, she’d wondered what it would’ve been like to kiss Fab at
midnight instead.
No
thoughts of her today. Enough.
On the Manhattan side of the river, the sharp angles of the
skyscrapers were burnished with light, making it seem as if the impossibly tall
buildings were sunbathing. New York City didn’t have majestic mountains or
roaring waterfalls or rolling plains, like her homeland, but it was a beautiful
city in its own way. It deserved better than to be the receptacle of memories
that impeded her forward motion like a badly tailored suit that was too tight at
the knees and elbows.
Likotsi had been working double duty as assistant to both
Prince Thabiso and Naledi, his betrothed, for months. She’d been particularly
dedicated to her job for the last seven months and three weeks, happy to work
long hours and not just for the supplemental pay. Thabiso had gone from gently
asking that she work less to outright commanding it.
She supposed she had been very. . . focused on
keeping their schedules and making sure everything ran like clockwork.
The
goat that wanders is the goat that gets lost. She hadn’t allowed herself to be lost to the pain of
stinging rejection, especially over such a fleeting affair. She had focused, stayed on the path of
international relocation and American apartment hunting and making sure that
everything in her boss’s life was handled before he could think of it. There
was a certain comfort in putting someone else’s life to order when her own felt
uncharacteristically messy.
But now she was on vacation. The last time she’d taken time
for herself in this manner had been, coincidentally, eight months before, when
Thabiso had been busy hiding his royal identity while wooing Naledi. Likotsi
had downloaded a dating app and made the error of swiping right on Fabiola C,
located 0.3 miles away.
Fab.
Fab’s bio had been seven words: Math. Jewelry. Dressing down is giving in. Dark brown skin, Bettie
Page bangs, and an hourglass figure were what had initially caught Likotsi’s
attention. Personality, talent, and drive were what had held it fast. An
immediate, theretofore unknown connection was what had made Likotsi sure Fab
was the one. Fab’s blunt, cold
breakup had shattered that illusion, but the shards remained.
Fabiola
C: I can’t do this. You’re leaving,
right? It was fun—let’s stop before it’s not.
Likotsi had thought the hurt would fade, eventually. It had
been a temporary fling after all, and she was no slouch at those. While Thabiso
had formerly held the title of the Playboy Pan Afrique, Likotsi had fared just
as well in her own dating sphere, minus the fuckboy tendencies. In Thesolo,
there were families anxious to settle their daughters with the prince’s right
hand, and when she traveled? Well, women found it hard to resist a sharp suit
and a soft smile. Surely a woman she’d only spent a few nights with shouldn’t
have done her heart more than a glancing blow.
If Likotsi’s obsession with efficiency had taught her
anything, it was that sometimes it was the briefest setback that toppled
everything afterward like dominoes.
TOUR WIDE GIVEAWAY DETAILS
To celebrate the release of ONCE GHOSTED,
TWICE SHY by Alyssa Cole, we’re giving away a paperback copy of A Princess
in Theory!
LINK: https://bit.ly/2zFrsvN
GIVEAWAY TERMS & CONDITIONS: Open to US shipping addresses only. One winner
will receive a paperback copy of A Princess in Theory by Alyssa Cole.
This giveaway is administered by Pure Textuality PR on behalf of Avon Romance.
Giveaway ends 1/14/2019 @ 11:59pm EST. Avon Romance will send the winning
copies out to the winner directly. Limit one entry per reader and mailing
address. Duplicates will be deleted.
ABOUT ALYSSA COLE
ALYSSA COLE is a science editor, pop culture nerd, and romance junkie who
lives in the Caribbean and occasionally returns to her fast-paced NYC
life. In addition to writing, she founded and hosted the Jefferson
Market Library Romance Book Club and taught Romance Writing for
Beginners. She speaks on topics such as writing erotic romance, writing
multicultural romance, and self-editing. She has contributed romance-related
articles to publications including RT Book Reviews, Heroes and Heartbreakers,
Romance at Random, and The Toast. She has also started a bi-monthly column in
the Romance Writer’s Report, Romancing the Globe, in which she chats with
romance writers from around the world. When she’s not busy writing, traveling,
and learning French, she can be found watching anime with her husband or
tending to her herd of animals.
AUTHOR LINKS
Website https://alyssacole.com/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AlyssaColeLit/
Twitter https://twitter.com/AlyssaColeLit
Goodreads https://goo.gl/RV5J5Y
Amazon http://amzn.to/2GdlEv3
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/AlyssaColeLit/
Twitter https://twitter.com/AlyssaColeLit
Goodreads https://goo.gl/RV5J5Y
Amazon http://amzn.to/2GdlEv3
1 comment:
I NEED to look into this series!
Post a Comment