Sweetheart’s official photographer has a problem. The boudoir photos Carrie Logan used to do, long ago and far away, have come back to haunt her. So she turns to Ethan Nash, the mysteriously gorgeous guy with big dogs and a bad attitude, for help containing this secret and the scandal it will cause.Ethan takes one look at the photo of young Carrie and his harsh cyber-security specialist exterior … specialist exterior begins to melt. For some reason, he feels the need to help this beautiful photographer. He’s pretty sure she’s stuck– once something’s on the internet, it’s there forever- but he offers her his assistance anyway. There’s something about her he finds irresistible…
What Ethan doesn’t realize is that he might need Carrie’s help far more than she needs his… Will she prove to be the one he needs?
Previously titled “Her Secret Protector” – Book 4 in the Secrets of Cherry Lake series
Forever Yours, Sweetheart also appears in…
The Starrs of Sweetheart, Montana series
Prequel: Shameless Sweetheart by Roxanne Snopek
Book 1: The Secret Son by Joan Kilby
Book 2: Her Sweetheart Brand by Paula Altenburg
Book 3: Yours Forever, Sweetheart by Roxanne Snopek
Book 4: The Montana Bride by Jeannie Watt
more
Heart warming
The plot was vety realistic. You could imagine this happening to a friend or someone you know. The characters are brought together to save her business, but end up saving each other. It is funny and romantic. I will definitely read other books written by this author.
It was a fun book to read. Held my attention and I enjoyed it very much.
It was hard to like the characters
Liked that the characters all had some angst (with one exception), and that they seemed a lot more like real people than most romance novel characters. Some things aren’t explained as well as they might be. For example, the H’s “scandal” is never really gone into, and it should have been, since part of the h’s problem is when she finds out about it late in the book. Otherwise, it’s pretty cohesive, and I liked that there was some real drama, rather than contrived—a bear attacking a dog is gruesome, but quite possible in a rural setting, and it’s the kind of drama that really exists in the world—-not drama created by imagined slights and dysfunctional people. Also liked that both the H & h faced themselves and their fears in a fairly realistic process, rather than instantly, miraculously being ‘fixed’. Enjoyed and will read again.
Very good book, really enjoyed this one.