Author:
Jo Watson
Series:
Destination Love, #1
On
Sale: November 1, 2016
Publisher:
Forever
Trade
Paperback: $14.99 USD
eBook:
$4.99 USD
**NOW
AVAILABLE IN PRINT FOR THE FIRST TIME**
Newly
revised and expanded, Jo Watson's Wattpad sensation Burning Moon is now
available in print for the first time!
There's
a very fine line between blushing bride and mascara-streaked sobbing mess.
#beenthere
Lily
Swanson has been planning her perfect life since she was twelve years old: Meet
Mr. Right, have the big white wedding, buy a house in the 'burbs and raise 2.5
picture-perfect kids. However, when her fiancé bails, leaving Lily alone at the
altar to face 500 gossipy guests, her dream turns into a nightmare. But then
Lily makes an impulsive decision—she ditches the dress, grabs her passport, and
heads off to Thailand to spend her honeymoon alone.
Or
so she thinks...
Because
Lilly quickly learns that everything in Thailand is very hot-the weather, the
merchandise, and especially Damien—the sexy, spontaneous man she meets before
her feet even hit the sand. Now with no plan, and nothing holding her back,
Lily lets Damien lead her on a wild, unpredictable ride to the world's most
exclusive party, Burning Moon. But after a week of letting go, indulging her
every impulse and desire, Lily must go back to the girl she used to be. Or can
Damien convince her that their party doesn't have to end?
There are moments in a person’s life
that change everything. Shake things up. Steer you in a different direction and
push you onto another course, toward different people, places and things. These
moments don’t come around often, but when they do, they rip through the very
fabric of your world.
I knew that this was one of those
moments. I knew this, because I’d had one of them before when I was twelve.
Ever since that age, I’d known exactly
what I wanted from life. I had planned it down to a T, to the second, to the
minutest detail imaginable. The reason for this, I guess, was that I’d been
shown a very good example of how not to live—thanks to my dramatic
mother. She was a theatre actress of some fame and status, which was something
she liked to remind everyone of…constantly. After she divorced my dad
when I was five, I endured what can only be described as hell. We moved around
frequently, from one play to the next, one rehearsal to the next, one man to
the next. The musician, the actor, the director, her yoga teacher, her voice
coach and even some magician who turned out to be a criminal. When they locked
him up, he vowed to escape, as “no handcuff could hold him.” To my knowledge
he’s still there.
My mother had terrible taste in men.
She was drawn to bad men like a hippie was drawn to tie-dyed T-shirts and world
peace. She also had some rather terrible hobbies: drunken, scantily clad
parties laced with cocaine were a regular occurrence. On many occasions, while
on my way to school, I’d have to navigate my way through a sea of unconscious
bodies lying limp and littered across our living floor. My dad finally won the
custody battle when I was twelve, and that’s when everything changed for the
better.
I moved into an ordered world of
perfect symmetry and seamlessly structured routine. A beautiful, neat home with
a stepmom who drove me to school and cheered me on at hockey practice and two
older stepbrothers who adored me. We took holidays twice a year to the same
place, our beach cottage on the beautiful Natal Coast of South Africa, and ate
the same meals on the same days of the week. My new life was predictable and I
loved it. My “new” family took me under their wing as if I were a damaged
little bird, which at the time I was.
I loved my new life so much that I
vowed mine would be exactly the same. Everything would have its place and
everything would fall in line with my plan.
Michael had been part of that plan:
Law school.
Work at my dad’s firm. Married by twenty-five (at the latest). First child by
twenty-six. Two boys and two girls. Live in a double-story house in a leafy
suburb not too far away from my family. Vacations at the cottage. Roast chicken
on Sundays.
But in less than twenty-four hours, my
entire plan had gone up in a puff of stinking smoke. I wasn’t just “not getting
married,” I was losing everything that I’d meticulously planned for since the
age of twelve. And then another thought hit me. A memory that made my body
ache.
“Won’t it be romantic if we conceived
our baby on our honeymoon?” Michael had said one night.
I rubbed my throat. The lump that was
forming made it hard to swallow.
I started to cry again. I grabbed
the remote and randomly pressed buttons until I got to the nature channel…
Swirling, turquoise waters. White sands
made luminescent by a low-hanging tropical sun. Massive palms, swaying
seductively in the cool sea breeze and gentle waves lapping on the shore. It
all looked so peaceful. So beautiful and, most importantly, so remote.
So, so far away from the farce that had
just become my life.
And then a thought hit me. It was so
decisive, and it slammed into me with such force that I almost fell off the
couch in shock. It was also, by far, the craziest thought I’d ever had in all
my twenty-four years on this planet. A part of me couldn’t believe it was even
mine.
I was going to go on my honeymoon!
Alone.
Burning
Moon, #1
Almost
A Bride, #2
Amazon * Barnes & Noble * Books-A-Million * iBooks * IndieBound * Google Play * Kobo
Jo
Watson is an award-winning writer of romantic comedies. Burning Moon won a
Watty Award in 2014. Jo is an Adidas addict and a Depeche Mode devotee.
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