All of the books in the series can be enjoyed as standalone stories, and this one is no exception. Check out the back-cover details:
“Nothing but love, 24/7” is the slogan of Mirabelle Harbor’s only radio station, 102.5 “LOVE” FM. On the verge of turning thirty-five, local DJ Blake Michaelsen is well-known for several reasons: his very sexy on-air voice, his omnipresent family, his eligible bachelor status, and his reputation as one of the most impulsive men in Chicago’s northern suburbs.
High-school French teacher and lifelong romantic Vicky Bernier is not at all wild about people who exhibit reckless conduct. (Blake.) Or men who have gigantic egos. (Blake.) Or grownups who still act like teenagers. (Blake, again.) She deals with enough adolescent behavior during the school day. Unfortunately, she’s the staff advisor to the Homecoming Committee, and they’ve chosen him as their DJ for the big fall dance.
What happens when a man whose job it is to play love songs for a living is forced to admit his deepest secret—that he doesn’t believe in true love—only to discover that the one woman who might capture his heart is the same woman who distrusts him the most?
No matter what you call it, with love there’s an exception to every rule. YOU GIVE LOVE A BAD NAME, a Mirabelle Harbor story.
**I hope you'll all enjoy reading Blake and Vicky's romance as much as I enjoyed writing it! (And that you'll like meeting Blake's dog, Winston, too. ;) Here's a peek at a never-before-seen excerpt from the novel:
My friends and I settled our bill and stepped outside of The Lounge just as a ruckus
was getting started next door at Max’s Pub.
“You asshole!” this
dopey, burly, drunk guy screamed, ineffectively swinging at another drunk guy.
“You witless
dickhead!” slurred the second guy. But that didn’t mask his identity. As soon
as he spoke, I knew who it was. Everyone did.
“Isn’t that Blake
Michaelsen?” Janet whispered.
“Yep,” I whispered
back. I’d only seen him in person once before—at a big event at the radio
station this summer—and it was, literally, across a crowded room. But Blake’s
voice on 102.5 LOVE FM was one of the sexiest I’d ever heard. I listened to him
on the radio all the time. And he was my friend Sharlene’s older brother, so I
knew a few additional facts about him than I might have otherwise.
Like that he was
impulsive.
And loud.
And kind of a
manwhore.
Then again, he had a
rep in town, so most women knew these things, too. It was just that Shar had
actually confirmed them for me.
Blake landed a
decent punch and sent the other guy stumbling. But Dopey Dude got back up.
Oh, boy.
Shar was going to be
so pissed when she heard about this.
And she would. Probably within three minutes or less. Gossip traveled at the
speed of sound in Mirabelle Harbor.
There was more yelling
between the men, along with a bunch of shouts from the sports-bar crowd
surrounding them. It reminded me of the stupid hall fights I’d had the
misfortune to have to try to break up at the high school. Dumb boy behavior at
its finest. Guys who fought each other because they couldn’t rationally reason
their way through a discussion. So foolish and immature. And, worse, so painful
to the people who actually cared about these cretins.
Dopey Dude landed a
crushing blow to Blake’s abdomen. He doubled over and fell to the pavement.
Then the other guy started to seriously pummel Blake while the crowd
alternately jeered, taunted, and screamed their encouragement.
I winced. Blake’s
dark hair was matted against his forehead with sweat and, also, with some fresh
blood. He had a gash across his cheekbones, dirt on his face and neck, and more
blood dripping from the corner of his mouth.
And he was
devastatingly handsome, even then.
Although, with the
angry eyes and the snarl on his lips, he looked like the poster child for one
the French revolutionary insurgents in Les
Misérables. If he decided to build a barricade, storm the Bastille, or lead
the crowd in the first verse of “Do You Hear the People Sing?” I wouldn’t dare
to stand in his way.
The fact that I
couldn’t guess whether he’d be more like a hero or a terrorist in any uprising
made me immediately uncomfortable, though. I hadn’t known he’d be like this.
His sister could get a little fiery sometimes, but Shar had a marshmallow
heart. Blake, by contrast, looked both self-destructive and vicious. Like he
could quite effectively kill someone.
Finally, an officer
came on the scene and broke up the fight. He ordered us all to leave, but I was
rooted to the spot. I couldn’t take my eyes off Blake’s cut-up face. So many
bruises, and he was even spitting blood.
Lisa nudged me.
“Let’s go, Vicky.”
Before I could make
my feet move, Blake looked up at me and our gazes collided. I kept imagining
the shock Shar would feel if she saw her brother in this horribly battered, sweaty,
and drunken state. She was very protective of her family. But nothing was going
to protect Blake from the wrath of one massive hangover and the need for some
serious first aid.
His eyes turned even
darker and they narrowed dangerously as he continued to stare at me.
Christine tugged me
away.
“They were like a
couple of wasted jocks after a football game,” she observed on the drive home.
“I know. I was
thinking the same thing. Like those boys that get into fights in the school
cafeteria. With them, it’s all crazy levels of testosterone and impaired
judgment, leading to damage of property and reckless endangerment of themselves
and others. Imagine someone acting that way after being out of high school for
fifteen years? It’s like they never got all the way through adolescence.”
Christine nodded.
“Although I can’t say being a mature grownup all the time is a barrel of
laughs.”
I smiled. “True. But
anything is better than being forever seventeen.”
I remembered myself
at seventeen and suppressed a shudder. That was one time of my life I’d never want to relive, and I had daily
witness as to why in my classroom.
Though, if forced to
be completely honest with myself, one of the main reasons I’d been drawn to
teaching was to see if I could make high school a better experience for kids
like me. For those quirky, quiet, culture-loving, rule-following bookworms who
really wanted to learn. Not that I was so different now, really. It was just
that, back then, I’d felt so alone. I hadn’t realized there might be others like
me out there.