A brand new Southern women's fiction from New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Sharon Sala who has 1.5 million books sold.
Wally Lamb meets Steel Magnolias in this story of LilyAnn Bronte, the Peachy-Keen Queen, which in Blessings, Georgia, was the epitome of success. After losing her fiance in the war in Iraq, her zest for life went into decline while added weight crept on. When a new guy arrives in town, LilyAnn embarks on a quest to remake herself from start to finish only to discover that love was always just right next-door.
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Check out Curl Up & Dye series:
Beloved by her brethren of fans, Sharon Sala, who also writes under the name Dinah McCall, has 99 books in print, is published in four genres: romance, young adult, western, and women’s fiction, and has sold more than 1.5 million books. Her books have appeared on USA Today, New York Times, and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists 47 times, and have been published in many different languages. Sala was the 2011 recipient of the Nora Roberts Lifetime Achievement Award. sharaonsala.net
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Check out what's up for grabs.
- 1 copy of The Curl Up & Dye
To Enter:
- Please fill out the Rafflecopter form.
Good Luck!
Special thanks to Sourcebooks sponsoring this giveaway.
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I am sensing maybe a friends to lovers story? My favorite trope. I would love to read this! Thanks for the chance to win!
ReplyDeleteLooks like a great read! Thanks for the giveaway :-)
ReplyDeleteI love the idea of this story and the cover is perfect.
ReplyDeletethis book sounds wonderful
ReplyDeleteBig fan of your books and I'd love to read this one. Sounds great!
ReplyDeleteI've got this on my wish list. I read an excerpt on another blog and really loved it!
ReplyDeleteThe covers are fun. I can't wait to read this series. Thanks for having the giveaway.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read!! I love Sharon Salas' books!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the chance to win!
I love the title! So cute!
ReplyDeleteWhat is your favorite salon memory? I miss the manicurist/aesthetician who owned a salon with her husband, and I miss the wife's sister who was a great stylist. They were Jordanian and called me "habibi" .... and I always looked great when I left and had the scoop on all the local gossip. They relocated the business to another town that wasn't feasible for me to visit. This book sounds wonderful and I'd love to give it a read!
ReplyDelete