Reviews for some of Serenity’s other books
An Uncommon Sense (please see the back of this book for an excerpt)
“This book was an unexpected delight... I’ve never read a book quite like this one and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Hats off to Serenity for a completely romantic read!”—Close Encounters with the Night Kind
“This is not your typical sappy romance; you get a full range of emotions from laughter to almost tears.”—Recommended Read by Guilty Pleasures Book Reviews
“An Uncommon Sense had me laughing at some of the antics and things Grace blurted. The end came before I expected as the story rolled along so easily, leaving an enjoyable afterglow.”—Sizzling Hot Books
White-Hot Christmas
“Highly recommended”—Library Journal’s XPress Reviews (their first ever starred review of a digital-first book)
“This is a light-hearted, sexy read but a totally enjoyable one.”—Recommended Read by Dear Author
“One of the best holiday books I have ever read.”—Long and Short Reviews
“An absolutely wonderful romance”—5 stars and a Recommended Read from Guilty Pleasures Book Reviews
Kiss and Make Up (writing as Faye Robertson)
“The movie set background, the friendships, the dynamic...it all just really worked for me and made this a perfect read for my taste. LOVED IT!”—Smitten with Reading
“Wonderfully written with witty dialogue, hot sex and two characters that were absolutely perfect together. A pleasure to read.”—Cocktails & Books
“I loved them as a couple and was desperately hoping for a HEA ending. Thank goodness Ms. Robertson delivered… And yes, it did make me cry just a little.”—Books n Kisses
“I LOVED this story and was glued to every word written... With fantastic lead characters, equally as interesting secondary characters, an intriguing plot and a deeply emotional tale of love--and I'd say Faye Robertson has delivered one helluva book!”—Paranormal Romantics
To Tony and Chris, my Kiwi boys
And to KP, for rescuing me again
Chapter One
“I’ll never remember your birthdays now.” Hamish McIntyre turned from the view of the New Zealand countryside and winked at his father, who was driving the car. Robert winked back.
“You never remembered them before you had amnesia,” his mother said wryly from the back seat. “Don’t think you can use that as an excuse.”
“Worth a try, though,” Hamish teased.
His brother, Eamon, also in the back, snorted. “Is that the sort of thing we can expect from now on? You milking this memory thing for all it’s worth?”
“Absolutely. I might as well make the most of it. And expect lots of jokes about me being legless too. Even when I’m not drinking.”
Everyone fell quiet, and Hamish glanced over his shoulder to see Sarah McIntyre biting her lip as she looked away. Eamon frowned at him, and Hamish cursed under his breath. He’d put his mother through hell over the last few months. He didn’t want to see her cry again. “Sorry, Mum. I guess you’re not quite ready for me to joke about it yet.”
She turned bright eyes back to him and managed a weak smile. “If you’re ready, I’m ready, love. I’m just so relieved you recognized us. I kept having this awful dream that we’d walk up to you and you’d stare at us blankly.”
Me too, thought Hamish, although he didn’t say it. “Of course I’d recognize you guys. I’d have to have something a lot more serious than a bump on the head to knock you lot out of my memory.”
“So come on then,” Eamon said, “what can you remember, exactly? Is any of it coming back?”
Hamish looked out of the window again. “No. Not yet. It’s all a bit muddled up there, but pretty much everything I’ve done over the last ten to fifteen years has gone.”
“So you don’t remember anything about going into the Army?” his father asked. “Nothing about
Serenity Woods
Betsy Ashton
C. J. Box
Michael Williams
Jean Harrod
Paul Levine
Zara Chase
Marie Harte
S.J. Wright
Aven Ellis