BLURB
Heartbreaker.
I
understand why I have the nickname. Hey, what can I say? I like women. All
women. It doesn’t matter what shape, size, or color. I’m even into sharing.
I’ve done it all, seen it all, but I’m at an all-time low. Who wouldn’t be? My
best friend is missing. My uncle’s an asshole. I don’t know who I am without
The Nights. We are a band of brothers, soldiering through the world with our
music. Only, our faithful leader is gone, and everyone else in the band is
falling for the oldest trap: love. Love is a lie. It is painful. It is hurtful.
I
need a break. I want to be alone. I'm not prepared to share the exclusive home
on the Island . I'm not prepared for her. I don’t know who
she is or why she's here. She tells me to call her Ireland . I tell her my first name only. Originally, I
don’t want to believe she doesn’t recognize me. Bass guitarist for The Nights,
come on? After a while we both play the game. Secrets are another form of lies,
aren't they?
Our
fantasy will crash to reality too soon. Secrets catch up to you. The truth has
to be told. It confirms what I already know: love is a lie.
Until
her.
REVIEW
I received a ARC from the
author in exchange for a honest review.
4.5* read.
this isn't the first in
this series, its actually the forth, but its the first book I've read by this
author and after this I cant wait to go back and read the first three books
too. its different and unique to other rocker books out there at the minute.
Tristan is is the bass guitarist of The Nights
and a big player and heartbreaker as well and
as a reader you can defiantly see this. he decides to disappear for a while so
he can pull his head together and into a bottle alone. what he doesn’t expect
is another person wanting to use the place to escape to. Ireland is a famous model that needs to escape just
like Tristan but for a completely different reason, she's being forced to marry
a man to cover a debt for her parents. both their worlds collide when they have to
live under the same roof.
PURCHASE
LINKS
B&N: Not available yet
Kobo: Not available yet
iBooks: Not available yet
ALSO AVAILABLE
#1 The Legend of Arturo
King
Kobo: http://bit.ly/1gbhR3K
iBooks: http://apple.co/1JELYY8
#2 The
Story of Lansing Lotte
Kobo: http://bit.ly/1gUMGtC
#3 The Quest of Perkins
Vale
Kobo: http://bit.ly/1ftTWeX
iBooks: http://apple.co/1IksV4C
EXCERPT
The
Truth of Tristan Lyons excerpt © L.B. Dunbar
I wanted
to know who she was. Scratch that, I didn’t care who she was. I wanted to know
how she got in the house. Damn these fangirls, sometimes. They knew no shame.
“Hey,” I
said grabbing her upper arm. “How did you get in here?”
She
seemed caught unaware of my approach and screamed loudly, pushing at my chest
hard enough, the sheer surprise forced me to let go of her.
With her
hand on her chest and her breasts rising and falling in great agitation, I was
able to see her big blue eyes and the sprinkle of freckles across her nose. Her
chin length blonde hair fell forward as she bent to clasp her knees and catch
her breath.
Standing
up almost as quickly as she bent over, she spoke to me through delicious looking
pink lips.
“Who the
fuck are you?” she growled.
“Who the
fuck, are you?” I returned.
“I’m…”
“You know
what, never mind. You need to go,” I said, cutting her off and reaching for her
upper arm again. “I don’t know how you got in here, where you came from, or how
you found me, but you need to go.”
I began
to tug her toward the front entry, her feet sliding in her flip-flops across
the tile flooring. She pulled back, and the force made her skid on an angle
across the slippery surface as I dragged her. She continued to glare at me
quizzically, leaning away from me.
“I don’t
know what you are talking about?”
“Did you
follow me, is that it? See me in the airport?”
“What?”
“Okay, I
love you too, now you need to go. Okay?”
“What are
you talking about?”
“Don’t
pretend you don’t know who I am?”
“I
don’t.”
I
stopped, still holding firmly to her arm. Something in her voice sounded like
she was being serious.
“I’m
Tristan.”
She
blinked, confusion clearly on her face. I was thoughtful for a moment. It was
the innocence in her blue eyes, and the fact she looked like she might cry.
Something wasn’t right with this scenario.
“Trist –
an,” I said slowly, as if she had some type of hearing impairment.
“Who?”
I
narrowed my eyes at her.
“What
kind of music do you listen to?”
“Country,”
she answered so quickly, she didn’t even blink an eye or stop for thought. On
top of that, she said it in such a way that showed she was thoroughly confused,
and almost disgusted with me, for even asking such a ridiculous question. She
wrinkled her nose.
“Look, I
know the owner, and you shouldn’t be here.”
“I know
the owner,” I repeated, “and you shouldn’t be here.”
“I’m not
leaving,” she said, pulling at her own arm again and sticking out a hand to
press against my chest as leverage. I had tugged my shirt off at some point
while I was passed out, and her warm hand felt good on my air-conditioned cool
skin. Her hand was tiny, I noticed. All of her was thin.
“I’m
supposed to be here. Alone,” I emphasized again.
She
didn’t respond, so I added, “I think I’ll just call the owner myself, to see
where the mix up is.”
“No,” she
blurted, stopping in her physical struggle against me. Her eyes opened even
wider, if that was possible, and her face was suddenly full of something I
couldn’t read. Her blue eyes brightened in a frightening sort of way. Was that
fear? Good, she should be afraid.
“Please.
I swear. I’m allowed to be here. You don’t need to call Isa.”
She had
me. I didn’t really know who Isa was, and the girl sounded confident enough
that I let her call my bluff.
“If there
is a mistake, and you were scheduled to stay as well, I won’t complain. As a
matter of fact, I won’t even be in your way. You won’t even know I’m here. I
plan to keep to myself.” Her eyes were glassy, and again I worried she was
about to cry.
I
released her arm and she pulled it back quickly. She fisted the hand of that
arm, holding it against her chest. She began rubbing her upper arm with the
opposite hand. I noticed again that she was thin, as were her breasts. I didn’t
care for small chested girls. I didn’t care for her.
“Well,
I’m Tristan, whom you claim to not know, and you are?”
“I’m…Ireland .”
“Ireland what?”
“Just…Ireland .”
I shook
my head.
“So this
is how we’re going to play it? Fine, my Irish Isle. What are you doing in the
Caymans?”
She
looked at me for a moment, then leaned toward me and sniffed. She held the
disgusted expression on her face and wrinkled her nose as she pulled back.
“Probably
the same thing as you.”
“Drinking
myself into oblivion?” I laughed, crossing my arms over my bare chest
defensively.
“Hiding,”
she replied.
AUTHOR
BIO
L.B. Dunbar loves to read to the
point it might be classified as an addiction. The past few years especially she
has relished the many fabulous YA authors, the new genre of New Adult,
traditional romances, and historical romances. A romantic at heart, she’s been
accused of having an overactive imagination, as if that was a bad thing. Author
of the Sensations Collection, Sound
Advice, Taste Test, Fragrance Free, Touch Screen, and Sight Words, she is also author of
the Legendary Rock Star series, beginning with The Legend of Arturo King. She grew up in Michigan, but has
lived in Chicago for longer, calling it home with her husband and four
children.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I’d like to say I was always a
writer. I’d also like to say that I wrote every day of my life since a
child. That I took the teaching advice I give my former students because
writing every day improves your writing. I’d like to say I have my
ten-thousand hours that makes me a proficient writer. But I can’t say any of those things.
I did dream of writing the “Great American Novel” until one day a friend
said: Why does it have to be
great? Why can’t it just be good and tell a story?
As a teenager, I wrote your
typical love-angst poetry that did occasionally win me an award and honor me
with addressing my senior high school class at our Baccalaureate Mass. I
didn’t keep a journal because I was too afraid my mom would find it in the
mattress where I kept my copy of Judy Blume’s Forever that I wasn’t allowed to read as a twelve year old.
I can say that books have been
my life. I’m a reader. I loved to read the day I discovered “The Three
Bears” as a first grader, and ever since then, the written word has been my
friend. Books were an escape for me. An adventure to the
unknown. A love affair I’d never know. I could be lost for hours in a
book.
So why writing now? I had
a story to tell. It haunted me from the moment I decided if I just wrote
it down it would go away. But it didn’t. Three years after writing
the first draft, a sign (yes, I believe in them) told me to fix up that draft
and work the process to have it published. That’s what I did. But one
story let to another, and another, and another. Then a new idea came into my
head and a new storyline was created.
I was accused (that’s the
correct word) of having an overactive imagination as a child, as if that was a
bad thing. I’ve also been accused of having the personality of a Jack
Russell terrier, full of energy, unable to relax, and always one step
ahead. What can I say other than I have stories to tell and I think you’ll
like them. If you don’t, that’s okay. We all have our book
boyfriends. We all have our favorites. Whatever you do, though, take
time for yourself and read a book.
L.B. Dunbar
AUTHOR
LINKS
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