Synopsis:
For the last eight months, Mandy has
lived across the hall from a caveman.
He won’t trim his beard, he mostly talks in grunts, and he’ll hardly emerge from his cave of an apartment. Ben might be a grumpy mess, but she kind of likes him anyway. She’s not attracted to him, of course. Not at all. Those stray feelings are merely a fluke. She’s looking for a man who has it all together, and Ben isn’t even close.
Benjamin Damon is heir to a billion-dollar corporate empire, but he has put his family and that whole lifestyle behind him. No one knows who he is now—not even his pretty princess of a neighbor who refuses to leave him alone.
When she ropes him into taking her with him to work on his mother’s historic Savannah home, he knows it’s a mistake. Mandy represents the world he’s tried so hard to escape, and he can’t let one woman strip him of the new man he’s tried to become. The more he’s with her, though, the more he wants her. Despite his best efforts, he’s falling for her hard—and dreading the day she finds out all of his lies.
He won’t trim his beard, he mostly talks in grunts, and he’ll hardly emerge from his cave of an apartment. Ben might be a grumpy mess, but she kind of likes him anyway. She’s not attracted to him, of course. Not at all. Those stray feelings are merely a fluke. She’s looking for a man who has it all together, and Ben isn’t even close.
Benjamin Damon is heir to a billion-dollar corporate empire, but he has put his family and that whole lifestyle behind him. No one knows who he is now—not even his pretty princess of a neighbor who refuses to leave him alone.
When she ropes him into taking her with him to work on his mother’s historic Savannah home, he knows it’s a mistake. Mandy represents the world he’s tried so hard to escape, and he can’t let one woman strip him of the new man he’s tried to become. The more he’s with her, though, the more he wants her. Despite his best efforts, he’s falling for her hard—and dreading the day she finds out all of his lies.
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Get to Know Noelle Adams:
What are your current
projects?
I’m
finishing the final edits on Finished, my next release under the Claire Kent
penname, and I’m well under way with my Christmas book, which is the next in
the Willow Park series.
Tell us about your first book.
What would readers find different about the first one and your most recent
published work?
I
wrote my first book when I was twelve. It was a time-travel romance that I
handwrote in a spiral-bound notebook. I certainly hope readers find my current
books different from that one!
Is there a message in your
novel that you want readers to grasp?
Each
book has a different meaning I want to express. They’re not always the same.
But I’d say in all of my books I want to portray love for what it is in real
life—in all its difficulty and messiness and joy. How that happens varies from
book to book, though. It’s very important to me that my books feel real to
human experience.
Does music play any type of
role in your writing?
No.
Not at all. I think I’m unusual in this way, since music seems to inspire a lot
of writers. But the only book I can think of where music played a role either
in the writing or the finished product was one where the hero was a musician. I
love music, but it has just never really inspired me in writing, and I never
listen to music as I write.
Are experiences based on
someone you know, or events in your life?
I
think all books are based on an author’s experiences with life—to a lesser or
greater extent, depending on the writer. But we write what we know and understand
about love, sorrow, laughter, sex, family, death, and other parts of life,
whether we base it on our own individual experiences or not. My books very
rarely look like my own life looks, though. I’ve written one character who has
a similar job to mine (Leila from Revival) and I’ve written a couple of
characters who have had similar romantic experiences as mine, but for the most
part their from my imagination and I just use what I know about what life feels
like as I write them.
What books have influenced your
life most?
Many
books and all kinds. Some classics (Little Women, Jane Eyre, David
Copperfield), some romances (Patricia Veryan is my favorite romance authors),
and some from entirely different genres (I love Agatha Christie and Guy Gavriel
Kay).
Can you share a little of your
current work with us?
Here
is a little snippet from Stripping the Billionaire, which really highlights the
fun contrast between the hero and heroine:
He
stiffened and watched her suspiciously as she walked around behind him.
“I’m
not going to touch your big, ugly beard. I promise.”
He
rolled his eyes but didn’t object when she started to run the trimmer along the
back of his neck.
“Are
you sure you want to do this at the dining room table?”
“Better
here than on one of my rugs.”
He
felt uncomfortable as she worked on him, conscious of her body behind him. When
he felt the trimmer come toward his jaw, he muttered, “Don’t get carried away.”
“Relax.”
She turned the trimmer off and leaned over to blow the hair off his neck.
The
sensation made Ben tense up.
He
gave himself a firm mental lecture. He was not—not—going to get turned on by Mandy. He’d done really well about
resisting that particular temptation over the last several months, and he
wasn’t going to give into it this evening.
“Oh,
Ben, you’re a mess,” she murmured. She ran her fingers through his hair,
rubbing his scalp in a way that felt incredibly good. “You’re not going to get
any action if you’re such a gorilla.”
“I’ll
have you know I get plenty of action, and so far I’ve had no complaints.
Do you have anything specific
that you want to say to your readers?
I’d
want to say thank you. I spent years writing and trying to get published in the
traditional way, without any success, so it’s been a great joy (and surprise) that
there are readers who want to read my books, as they are, and keep wanting to
read more.
How can readers discover more
about you and your work?
They
can visit my website: http://noelle-adams.com/. I keep the site updated with book descriptions, book trailers,
and buy links. I’m also active on my Facebook page-- https://www.facebook.com/NoelleAdamsAuthor --so that’s a good way to connect with me and keep up with
news.
Do you have a special time to
write? How is your day structured writing-wise?
I
write whenever I can find the time. I have a full-time job, but the hours for
it are somewhat flexible, so I don’t have to be in an office all day. I’m most
productive when I can start writing at about eight in the morning, but more
often I have to write in the afternoons or evenings, when I’ve gotten
everything done for the day for my job. I never write late at night. I just
can’t think well after about nine in the evening.
Why did you choose to write contemporary
romance stories?
When I was in high school and college, I was mostly writing historical romance. I love that genre, and I would actually love to try writing it again. But I would always get bogged down with research on historical details, which got in the way of getting anything written. I turned to contemporary romance at first so I wouldn’t use research as an excuse—and I found I really loved it. The irony is that I still find it easy to get bogged down in research, even in contemporary stories.
What is for you the perfect
book hero?
My
heroes are almost always achievers, usually very successful in their
profession. But they’re not traditional alpha-heroes who control everything,
including the heroine. I want my heroes to be like real men—only the best kind
of men. They’re always very intelligent, and they’re always very kind at heart.
And they always have a good sense of humor.
When you start a book, do you
already have the whole story in your head or is it built progressively?
Some
of both. I always have the broad strokes of the plot worked out before I start,
but the entire story isn’t fleshed out yet. So I’ll know in general that, in
chapter 8, the couple needs to have a fight, but I don’t always know exactly
what the fight will be about until I get to that point in the manuscript.
When and why did you begin
writing?
When
I was in eleven, my teacher had us write a story, and the teacher told me—and
then told my parents—that I was a born writer. His encouragement really meant a
lot to me, and my parents took it seriously and always supported me in terms of
writing. I’ve been writing ever since.
When did you first consider
yourself a writer?
When
I was twelve and wrote my first novel.
Tell us something that people
would be surprised you know how to do.
I
can recite whole scenes from Hamlet from memory. Does that count?
Will you write more about these
characters?
Yes,
I think they Damons will show up again. I’m going to write a spin-off series
called Beaufort Brides, using the family that was introduced in Stripping the
Billionaire. So, since they’re populating the same world, some of the Damons
will probably show up in those books from time to time.
------------------------------------------
Series Questions
Tell us about your first book
in the series. What would readers find different about the first one and your
most recent published work?
The
first book in the Heirs of Damon series is Seducing the Enemy. I think it’s not
all that different from Stripping the Billionaire, which is the last book in
the series. The line editing was done differently, so the prose doesn’t rely as
much on rhythm to convey emotional power, and the hero is a bit more
traditionally alpha, but the plot structure and characterization is quite
similar.
How hard has it been for you,
research-wise, to bring this series to life?
This
series hasn’t required a huge amount of research. It’s set in various places
(an English estate, Provence, Santorini, Savannah), but I only used places I’ve
visited and am familiar with, so the settings didn’t require a lot of research.
The Damons are contemporary Americans (even when they live abroad) so their
language and such is familiar to me. So the only research I did was on more
minor things, like DNA research on MS for Engaging the Boss and Greek property
law for Playing the Playboy.
Did you always planned to write
Benjamin Damon’s story?
Yes,
Ben was the fourth Damon nephew, so I always knew I’d get to his story
eventually. He had a minor role in Seducing the Enemy, where he talked to
Harrison (the hero of that book) in the black moment, and I always knew I
wanted a matching scene in Ben’s book, where Harrison talked to him in his
black moment. I really like how it worked out.
How would you describe this
series to someone who has not read any of the books but is intrigued by the
concept?
The
Heirs of Damon books follow the four nephews and heirs of a rather eccentric
billionaire who wants to live like an 18th century lord of the manor
and puts a lot of pressure on his nephews, leading them to the plots of the
four books. The books are romantic and amusing and a little bit steamy, with a
lot of heart.
Excerpts:
Instead of taking the hint that he should leave, he came over and sat down on the edge of her bed. His beard and hair were disarrayed, but there was something masculine, powerful about the breadth of his shoulder, the lines of his bare chest, the way his lean abdomen tapered down to the waistband of his shorts.
When
her body began to like the look of his body, Mandy realized it was really not a
good idea for him to be sitting on her bed this way.
He
was still focused on the conversation, though. “I don’t think there’s anything
silly about missing your parents. I don’t think it’s wrong to cry about them
sometimes.”
For
some reason, his sympathy and understanding prompted another surge of emotion.
She twisted her face to control it. “Thank you. I think I’m a pretty happy
person in general. You know? I have a good life. But I don’t know if I’ll ever
feel as safe and content and connected as I did with them.”
She
sniffed and blotted at her eyes with the back of her hands.
Ben
moved over in the bed so he was propped against the headboard. Then he pulled
her under the crook his arm. “I know,” he murmured. “I know.”
She
huddled against him, taking comfort in his warmth and his strength. Even the
beard didn’t feel scratchy as it rubbed against her skin. It was softer than
she’d expected.
“Sometimes
I’m just…lonely,” she admitted, feeling like she could speak the truth right
now. In the dim room. With Ben. She felt like she could be heard. Understood.
Safe.
“I
know.” He was stroking her bare arm and her hair now
“I
have great friends. I have nothing to complain about. But I think that’s why
I’m so focused on finding a husband. Because I want to…I want to feel that way
again. Sometimes, I’m just…lonely.”
“I
know.” He tilted his head down to nuzzle at her hair. “So am I.”
The
vulnerability in the words surprised her, since Ben was never vulnerable. She
looked up toward his face, and was surprised to see something on his face that
looked like hunger, longing, need.
She’d
never seen anything like it.
Her
breath hitched. “Ben?”
“Oh,
Cupcake,” he murmured with a rasp in his voice.
Then
he was tilting his head down even farther and meeting her lips with his.
It
wasn’t like the little kiss from the day before—that had been light, almost
playful.
This
was deep immediately, hungry immediately. She opened her mouth to his as a wave
of intense need overwhelmed her.
She
needed Ben. Needed all of him. She needed his understanding and his strength
and his humor. This connection she was feeling with him. She needed his warm
presence. His body. So much.
His
tongue explored her mouth as he eased her down onto her back, moving over her
with an urgent entitlement that thrilled her.
“Mandy,”
he murmured, lightening the kiss so his lips were just playing against hers for
a few moments. There was a palpable tension in his body, though. “Mandy, please
tell me if you want me to stop.”
It
was too fast. A little voice in the back of her mind was screaming that this
was too fast. She and Ben weren’t ready for this yet. But the rest of her drowned
out that little voice with a desperate, needy desire she’d never felt before.
“Oh,
God,” she gasped, reaching around to run her hands up and down the strong
planes of his back. “I don’t want you to stop. Please, don’t stop.”
About Noelle Adams
Noelle handwrote her first romance
novel in a spiral-bound notebook when she was twelve, and she hasn't stopped
writing since. She has lived in eight different states and currently resides in
Virginia, where she teaches English, reads any book she can get her hands on,
and offers tribute to a very spoiled cocker spaniel.
She loves travel, art, history,
and ice cream. After spending far too many years of her life in graduate
school, she has decided to reorient her priorities and focus on writing
contemporary romances.
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