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Aterovis, Josh: Breaking Masks
When Jake Sheridan decided to move far away for college, he was trying to put
his past behind him and get a fresh start. He didn't know what he was getting himself into. Now he's feeling far away from everything and everyone he
knows...and feeling quite lonely. Then he meets the adorably awkward kid at the coffee shop...
Kody Kingsley let his dad talk him into attending his
alma mater and now he's have trouble adjusting to his new setting as well. Things are only further complicated when he finds himself attracted to the hot
guy he seems to be running into everywhere he goes. If he only knew the attraction was mutual...
Bad-timing and unexpected obstacles seem to be
conspiring to keep them apart. Can love win out in the end?
Garay, A. J.: Love Dream Novel
A young woman finds her dream man, and is hurled into a terrible life
threatening dispute between her lover and cupid. She becomes a women's rights activist fighting a war-for-independence against the moral wrong doings of an
unruly god, seeking to fall in love by her own freewill.
Hubbard, Sylvia: Stealing Innocence
Kimberly could not believe what her uncle wanted her to do. In order to
keep the inheritence of her husband's, her uncle wanted her to get pregnant. Yet, when Hawthorne dies unexpectantly, Uncle Charles kidnaps a man who
resembles Kimberly's desease husband, ties him to a bed, and orders Kimberly to rape the man until she is pregnant. Uncle Charles would kill
him, after the deed was done so no one would ever know the truth.
Having no choice in the matter, Kimberly faces the exquisite dark body of man and in her innocence, prepares herself to steal his seed.
Surly, mean tempered Jaelen can't believe someone had the nerve to tie him to the bed.
When his cold eyes fall on the beautiful, angelic Kimberly and he realizes her intentions, he vows to escape and get revenge if it takes the rest of his life.
Namiko: A Japanese Dream in Seventy-Nine Letters
Namiko, a young Japanese teacher of languages travels to Oxford to improve her
English. During her stay in England, which takes a couple of weeks, she meets a student from the Continent.
After having returned to Kyoto, the old
Japanese imperial city and her home town, she starts a long correspondence with Hubert, the student from the Continent, she met in Oxford.
Within
twenty months, from early autumn 1975 till late spring 1977, she writes seventy-nine love-letters. And in between she travels, for a period of several
months, to Europe to see Hubert again.
The possibilities and impossibilities of this tender Asian-European relationship are described in this novel
with great subtlety.
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