Lilli Accardo moves to the dying town of Signal Bend, Missouri, where the citizens have made a devil’s bargain to stay afloat. Lilli quickly garners the attention of the whole town, particularly Isaac Lunden, President of the Night Horde Motorcycle Club and de facto protector of the town and its citizens. When it turns out that Lilli is there under murky circumstances, Isaac decides to get close … close and try to figure out what she’s hiding. Their chemistry is instantaneous and electric, but each is a potential danger to the other. Action, sex, and drama ensue as Isaac and Lilli try to navigate the rocky terrain between trust and threat. Note: Explicit sex and violence.
(New Book Cover 12/5/2013)
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Move the Sun is the first book by Susan Fanetti that I have read and I am in love with the series and the characters!
This book is a steamy, fast-paced, action-packed story that grabbed me on page one and held me hostage until the last page.
I enjoy MC stories and this one is now one of my favorites!
Isaac is being pulled in so many directions as the club he is the President of has to deal with the possibility of the small town they protect being threatened and he is also trying to figure out the puzzle that is Lilli. He knows she is keeping secrets and isn’t sure if she is another threat to his club. As he gets to know her he realizes that she is not a threat and he can’t seem to get enough of her. The good thing is it seems that steamy chemistry they have goes both ways!
The big threat to the small town of Signal Bend hasn’t been taken care of yet so read on to the next book in the series. I know I will! Enjoy!
4.5 stars. This is the first book I read by Susan Fanetti several years ago. I re-reread this series in late 2018 after having found out she had created two other related series, The SoCal Horde and the Brazen Bulls, not sure how I missed this.
Susan has written fan fiction based on the Sons of Anarchy so the MC genre is well known by her. I love the grittiness of her stories. Move the Son hooked me on Susan, and I devoured these books as they came out due to their realism, set in a real world with strong female characters with as many or more flaws than me. They don’t always make the right decisions and there are bad consequences as a result.
Lili moves to a small dying Missouri town, where everyone knows everyone. She hides her true identity and reasons for living in this town. She quickly runs into the president of the Horde MC, Isaac Newton, Big Ike. Big Ike took over the club at a young age by killing his father. Lili and Issac chemistry is off the charts from the beginning. There is a lack of trust on both sides, he knows she is hiding something and she doesn’t expect to stay in town for long.
This is a romance, but as all true of Susan’s books there are troubles on the way that are not pretty. Move the Son is probably one of her less brutal stories.
Enjoyed this one. It ends with a To Be Continued rather than a cliffhanger. Great series!
I finally popped my Susan Fanetti cherry and it was a fabulous experience. I’m a huge fan of MC series and Move The Sun was a fantastic introduction to the Signal Bend series. I loved Lilli from the first moment she was introduced. She was badass with a lot of losses in her baggage. Her past was beautifully depicted and only made me more in awe and a fan of her. I had the same reaction to Isaac. Loved him from the first moment and his and Lilli’s chemistry was blazing hot. I enjoyed the many different sides to him as well. Especially how creative he was in his spare time.
This series is definitely on my radar now thanks to Fanetti’s strong, gritty and flawless prose. I have new favorite MC series.
Still one of my all-time favorite MC books and series. The club family and friendships in this series, as well as the couples, are hard to match. Love, love, love
All the elements worked brilliantly in Move the Sun; plot, conflict, characters. It’s a raw, gritty story. Descriptive prose about the town of Signal Bend, its people, and its business beautifully centered these two characters right to the epicenter of the story. Everything happening in the story is real; very telling of the kind of people Isaac and Lilli prove themselves to be. I’m excited to move on to the next book and see where their story goes from here as I’ve found a new series to add to the favorites list. Colorful depictions of the Night Horde MC put us right in the middle of their club. The Night Horde, while maintaining a stereotypical MC vibe, are interestingly different than any other MC I’ve read about. A fluid, moving, unique plot keeps up entranced as we enter this politically un-correct world of debauchery and mayhem. With a hero and heroine who enchant us with their character in a story that isn’t meant to enchant us, we see the world of Signal Bend in varying shades of grey rather than black and white.
Still one of my top five reads, even after all these years! Highly recommend!