Want more romance in your life? Free romance novels throughout February!
I am proud to be working alongside 17 other authors to celebrate Valentine’s Day and romance novels throughout the month of February.
All through the month, we’ll be offering one of our romance novels free with sign-up to our author newsletters.
There are a lot of new-to-me authors and novels on this list that I’m eager to read (and I’m sure you will, too). Go to see the list of giveaways – including the chance for a $25 Amazon certificate – at the Sweetheart Reads give-away page here.
I’ll be giving away my best-selling novel, my time-travel historical fiction romance novel, Dark Blue Waves. See the book blurb below, and get over to visit the page and stock up your Kindles with great romance reads!
When you wake up in Bath, England two hundred years in the past, how far can a love of Jane Austen get you?
Janet Roberts dreams of an academic career in literature, so she can hardly believe her good fortune when she’s accepted into a Jane Austen graduate seminar in Bath, England. Settled in Georgian splendor among her seminar colleagues, Janet and her classmates live, eat and breathe Jane Austen.
An accident interrupts this idyll when Janet regains consciousness in her own room-back in Regency England. For a scholar of nineteenth-century literature, this should be a dream come true.
But Janet quickly learns there’s a world of difference between scholarly knowledge of the written page and maneuvering real life as a reluctant time traveler.
Her burgeoning friendship with Emma Huntington eases her entrée into nineteenth-century society. However, Emma’s brother, the handsome, proud and frustratingly magnetic Sir Edward, is far less welcoming.
While desperately attempting to make sense of her dilemma, Janet treads a thin line between trying to blend into her new world and not being unmasked as the imposter she is. Can she find the way to return to her twenty-first century life before her secret is discovered? After working so hard to create a rewarding nineteenth-century life for herself, does she even want to?