Title: Someday, Somehow
Author: Claudia Burgoa
Genre: Romantic Comedy
Release Date: October 3, 2019
Blurb
Men and women can be friends.
At least that’s what I’ve been telling myself since George walked into my life.
We bicker as much as we have each other’s backs.
We’re inseparable.
So, she left to find herself and I feel like I can’t breathe without her.
It’s okay, it’s only temporary.
But when she walks back into my life, it’s on the arm of a stranger.
Her fiancé.
Seriously, I just realized I'm in love with her and she's engaged?
I have six weeks to convince George we’re meant to be together—not only in the kitchen or be forced to watch her marry another man.
Time is running out, and soon, she’ll be gone from my life.
I’m risking everything, will that be enough?
At least that’s what I’ve been telling myself since George walked into my life.
We bicker as much as we have each other’s backs.
We’re inseparable.
So, she left to find herself and I feel like I can’t breathe without her.
It’s okay, it’s only temporary.
But when she walks back into my life, it’s on the arm of a stranger.
Her fiancé.
Seriously, I just realized I'm in love with her and she's engaged?
I have six weeks to convince George we’re meant to be together—not only in the kitchen or be forced to watch her marry another man.
Time is running out, and soon, she’ll be gone from my life.
I’m risking everything, will that be enough?
Someday, Somehow is a sexy romantic comedy that's
equal parts funny and flirty.
Made of Honor clashes with When Harry Met Sally in a
sweet and seductive love story of hopeful hearts and second chances.
$2.99 for a limited time!
AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU
Free in Kindle Unlimited
Excerpt
“A junior
invited me,” Megan said excitedly. “It might be the party of the year.”
Party?
It looks
like Union Square during New Year’s Eve.
What is
everyone waiting for?
This party
wasn’t worth the three-mile walk from our dorm to here.
The cheap
alcohol tops it all. I didn’t get drunk with the first sip of a screwdriver; I
got a massive headache. This isn’t for me. The circle of girls gossiping about
everything as they wait to be swooped by some guy—not my scene.
Haven’t we
done this for the past twelve hours? Chat about nonsense. This is why I don’t
have many friends. I was too busy with
my extracurricular activities that I skipped socializing 101. Give me a good
book to read. A movie to watch or a marathon on TBS or Nick at Nite to keep me
up all night. I suggest we leave, and what does roommate-dearest
say in response? “I’ll find you a place to crash.”
The bedroom
is dark but clean. I grab a sweatshirt and even a bear I find on the floor. It
only takes a few seconds for me to fall asleep. It is quiet, smells of
sandalwood and pine, and the sheets are soft.
I miss
home.
Everything
is going well until the guy from the coffee shop wakes me up. I swear it feels
like a dream. A nightmare. But after we talk, I realize he’s not as bad as I
thought. He’s one of the good guys but likes to pretend he’s anything but.
His
food…who knew eggs could taste this great? In exchange for yet another plate, I
could offer to fix the light fixtures. This place is off code.
And there I
go, thinking like my father. Instead of teaching me construction, he should’ve
taught me how to socialize. I wish my aunts had been around more often during
my teenage years. I’d be a little cooler, or at least I’d know how to make
friends easily.
Auggie
takes the empty plate from my hands and offers me some milk. I nod, that sounds
better than whatever they’re serving upstairs.
“It must be
hard moving away from all your friends and family,” he says.
I shrug and
smile. I don’t make friends easily. Well, actually, I don’t make friends at
all. Dad and I have always been on the run. Running to school, running to a
construction site, running to tae kwon do, running to the grocery
store...
There’s
never time to exchange more than a greeting and a weak how are you before I
have to go again.
During my
spare time I help Dad around the house or at work. If I do the latter, it pays
for my knickknacks, and I get to spend time with him.
“It’s just
Dad and me,” I remind him.
“Any other
family?”
“Mom’s
family faded away after she died. Dad’s sisters stepped up, but now they have
their own families, so during my teenage years it was just the two of us.” I
drink some of the milk he poured me.
“Grandparents?”
“How about
you?” I fire back without answering his question. And study him.
He’s not as
bad as I thought earlier. In fact, he’s very nice. And good looking. Tall,
mussed-up, dark hair, hazel eyes. Black t-shirt hugging his lean and defined
muscles. There’s a playful tug at the corner of his mouth, and I see a dimple
forming on the left side of his cheek.
He turns me
on, but he’s he and well, I’m me.
Author Bio
Claudia is an award-winning, USA Today bestselling
author. She lives in Colorado, working for a small IT. She has three children
and manages a chaotic household of two confused dogs, and a wonderful husband
who shares her love of all things geek. To survive she works continually to
find purpose for the voices flitting through her head, plus she consumes high
quantities of chocolate to keep the last threads of sanity intact.
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