From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Fool’s Gold romances Susan Mallery, comes the first standalone title in the Happily, Inc. Series—YOU SAY IT FIRST! You’re invited to visit Happily, Inc., a wedding destination founded on a fairy tale. Where people live… wait for it… happily ever after.
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YOU SAY IT FIRST Synopsis:
The #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Fool's Gold romances invites you to visit Happily Inc, a wedding destination founded on a fairy tale...
Sculptor Nick Mitchell grew up in a family of artists and learned from his volatile father that passion only leads to pain. As he waits on a new commission, he takes a day job as a humble carpenter at a theme wedding venue. The job has its perks--mainly the venue's captivating owner, Pallas Saunders. Although he won't let love consume him, for ecstasy with an expiration date, he's all in.
Pallas adores Weddings in a Box. But if she can’t turn the floundering business around, she’ll have no choice but to cave to her domineering mother and trade taffeta for trust funds working at the family’s bank. Then when a desperate bride begs Pallas for something completely out of the box, her irresistible new hire inspires her. Nick knows she doesn't belong behind a desk, and she knows in her heart that he's right—where she really belongs is in his arms.
Review:'You Say It First' is the first book in the Happily Inc series. What I liked about this one is that we get more of the Mitchell brothers. We met them in Mallery's Fool's Gold series. While I only read a few of those books, I loved what I did read. Wonderful, feel good romance.
I'll be the first to admit that while I liked this story, I felt it lacked a certain spark I look for in my romances. The romance part was a little too fast for my liking. But that's just a personal preference for me...I like the slow buuuuurn. This book is about Nick and Pallas. Her name is weird and I take it that it's said like Dallas but with a P? It's weird but in a good way; I always like to read character names that are different.
Pallas owns a wedding venue that makes all future brides and grooms's wedding dreams come true. Nick is an artist and part time carpenter. When the two meet, they have an instant and easy connection. I think what worked for me in the story was the fact that we are going to get more stories with other characters. Mallery has already set up some potential storylines that I'm most excited to read.
While this wasn't a favorite of mine, I did enjoy Nick and Pallas. Despite the romance, there was some drama with families on both sides, and then the whole thing with Pallas needing to do something to make sure her business stays afloat. I look forward to more stories from Susan Mallery!
*Thank you to the publisher for providing a copy for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
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Excerpt:
Nick sanded the sliver of wood
so the point was sharper, then used tweezers to carefully put it into place.
This time the fit was perfect. The restoration of the panels was painstaking
work, but worth it, he thought. Something this beautiful deserved to be made
whole again.
“Do you have a second?”
He looked up and saw Pallas in the doorway. Not a
surprise—this was her business and from what he could tell, she was in the
office every day. However, right now something was very different and every
cell in his body noticed.
Instead of her usual work uniform of jeans and
T-shirt, she had on a long dress. But not just any dress. It was low-cut, with
a tight, black leather corset over a white short-sleeved puffy blouse and full,
black-and-white vertical strip skirt that fell to the floor.
She had curves he hadn’t noticed before—the kind
of curves that got a man to thinking about touching and tasting. While he’d
known that Pallas was female and someone whose company he enjoyed, he hadn’t
exactly seen her that way before. That he did now was
unsettling. Worse was the possibility that now there was no way to unsee
her.
She held out the skirt with both hands. “I have a
princess wedding with a black-and-white theme. My friend Violet wants to make
these changes to the server costumes.” Her voice sounded doubtful.
“We’ve used
this basic style forever, but she added the corset and the overlay on the
skirt.”
She spun around for him to see the back, then bent
over to look at the—well, he didn’t know or care what. Not with her breasts
practically spilling out. Was it him or was it hot in here?
“I can’t figure out if it’s sexy or slutty. I
thought I could get a man’s opinion.”
He had to clear his throat before he could speak. “It
looks good.”
“Really? Do you think it will be a distraction?”
“Probably, but is that bad?”
“As long as the bride isn’t pissed.” She smiled. “I
guess we’ll risk it. I’ll tell her we’re a go with the slutty dresses.”
“Sexy, not slutty.”
“I can only hope.”
She released the skirt and crossed her arms under her
breasts. The full curves seemed to swell toward him, which made it difficult to
think about anything but walking over and pulling her close. What he would do
after that wasn’t totally clear. Mostly because there were so many
possibilities—there was no way to pick just one.
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