The Most
Wonderful Time of the Year
by Marie Landry
Release Date:
11/05/13
Summary from
Goodreads:
Christmas is
the most wonderful time of the year, right? At least that’s what
twenty-year-old Ginny Bailey’s grandmother always told her, and Ginny believed
it until Grama died. She even put on a brave face the following two
Christmases, carrying on Grama’s traditions and decorating her house and café
with Grama’s favorite decorations.
But Ginny can’t pretend any longer. When she finds out she’s going to be alone for the holidays this year, her Christmas spirit goes out the window, along with her luck. Everything that can go wrong does, and Ginny just wants to spend the holidays hiding under the covers...until Dean Riley comes back into her life. With their shared past, old feelings begin to resurface almost immediately, and Ginny thinks Dean might just be the Christmas miracle she’s been waiting for to help her remember why Christmas really is the most wonderful time of the year.
But Ginny can’t pretend any longer. When she finds out she’s going to be alone for the holidays this year, her Christmas spirit goes out the window, along with her luck. Everything that can go wrong does, and Ginny just wants to spend the holidays hiding under the covers...until Dean Riley comes back into her life. With their shared past, old feelings begin to resurface almost immediately, and Ginny thinks Dean might just be the Christmas miracle she’s been waiting for to help her remember why Christmas really is the most wonderful time of the year.
Available from:
What people are saying about The Most Wonderful
Time of the Year:
“While The Most Wonderful Time of the Year is
a quick read, it is an adorable one. This story shows the value of friends and
family and the importance they have in our lives, no matter what time of the
year it is…If you're looking for a well-written, heartwarming story for those
cold days, pick this up.”
~ Jessica Sankiewicz, author of If Only
We
“Marie Landry delivered the perfect little holiday
novella with The Most Wonderful Time of the Year. It has a small-town
coffee shop, memories of Christmas with Grandma, snowballs, hot cocoa and a
yummy man from our heroine’s past. Mini review: romantic, sweet and filled with
holiday spirit.”
Kimberly from Caffeinated
Book Reviewer
“The Most Wonderful Time of Year was quick
and sweet, just how I like my holiday reads.”
~ Christy from Love
of Books
About the
Author
Marie Landry
is the author of BLUE SKY DAYS (contemporary YA—January 2012), THE GAME CHANGER
(women's fiction—November 2012), WAITING FOR THE STORM (contemporary YA—April
2013), and THE MOST WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR (a new adult holiday
novella-November 2013). Marie has always been a daydreamer; since early
childhood, she's had a passion for words and a desire to create imaginary
worlds, so it only seemed natural for her to become a writer. She resides in
Ontario, Canada, and most days you can find her writing, reading, blogging
about writing and reading, listening to U2, wandering around with a camera in
her hand, watching copious amounts of TV on DVD, or having grand adventures
with her nephews and niece.
Author Links:
Excerpt;
“I
never forgot about you,” Dean said. “When I saw you in the café
yesterday, I knew you looked familiar but I couldn’t even begin to
hope it was you. You look so different, and I figured you’d
probably left town after your grandmother passed. But now…this is
like…I don’t even know, it’s too crazy to put into words. After
all these years, here we are. Adults, living next door to each
other.”
“All
grown up,” I said with a little smile. “Now two years doesn’t
seem like any age difference at all, does it?”
“It
doesn’t.” His bright blue eyes shifted to my mouth, and his lips
twitched into a smile. “And I bet if I wanted to kiss you, I
wouldn’t have to find an excuse.”
My
breath hitched and my heart did a weird little tripping thing in my
chest. “You never asked if I have a boyfriend. How do you know I’m
not married with kids?”
He
chuckled. “I don’t think you’d be looking at me the way you are
if you were married with kids,” he said. “Or even if you had a
boyfriend.”
“And
how am I looking at you?”
“Like
you used to all those years ago.” I hadn’t noticed him leaning
forward, but now his face was just inches from mine. “Like I
imagine I used to look at you when I wanted to kiss you, but you had
no clue.”
I
couldn’t believe I was sitting in my kitchen staring into the eyes
of my childhood crush. The years we’d spent apart faded away, and
all I could think about was that sixteen-year-old boy who’d told me
I should hold his hand whenever we jumped into the lake, or who
always rubbed my arms over my towel when we got out dripping wet. Now
I could see what I hadn’t seen then—the look of affection in his
eyes, the way he’d use any excuse to touch me, just like he said. I
had no idea what Dean the man was like, but I’d known and loved
Dean the boy and that was good enough for me at this moment.
“Nothing’s
stopping you from kissing me now,” I told him, surprised by the
low, throaty sound of my voice.
A
grin flashed across his face, and he closed the distance between us.
His lips hadn’t even touched mine when the doorbell rang, startling
us apart.
“And
so my bad luck from yesterday returns,” I muttered.
Dean
looked at me questioningly, but I just shook my head regretfully and
slid from the stool. “Hold that thought.”
He
nodded, his eyes following me as I stood. “I’ll just use your
phone while I wait.”
Freddy
was standing on my front steps when I opened the door. “Hey,
sweetheart,” he said, holding up his toolbox. “My first
appointment was pushed back so I thought I’d come take a look at
that beast of a water heater, see what I can do.”
I
stepped aside and let him in. “That’s great, Freddy, thanks.”
He kicked off his snowy boots and headed down the hallway, pausing
when he met Dean, who was coming out of the kitchen. Freddy looked
over his shoulder at me with raised eyebrows, and I said a silent
prayer of thanks that he wasn’t one of the gossipy people in town.
“Fred,
this is my new neighbour, Dean Riley,” I explained. “He’s Mr.
Riley’s grandson.”
“Ahh,
right, I heard you’d be moving to town to take over the old man’s
house.” Freddy shook Dean’s hand and they exchanged pleasantries
before Dean started telling him about how he’d checked out the
water heater but didn’t know if he had the right tools to fix it.
I
stopped paying attention. I took the opportunity to admire Dean; he
stood with his hands in his jeans pockets, nodding along to something
Freddy was saying, and when he laughed I felt my lips twitch in
response. He had a great laugh—he didn’t hold back, and his whole
face lit up.
His
gaze slid past Freddy and landed on me, and I blushed at being caught
staring. His grin morphed into something different, something almost
secret and private, and my body grew as warm as my cheeks.
Freddy
excused himself to get to work, and Dean sauntered over to me, his
hands still shoved in his pockets. “I need to get going.” I must
not have done a very good job of hiding my disappointment because he
reached out and rested one hand on my shoulder. “I have to go meet
with the realtor who handles my granddad’s properties, but…what
do you say we hang out tonight? Get to know each other as adults
instead of kids.”
“I’d
love that,” I said, unable to control the almost-giddy smile that
overtook my face. As much as I wished we hadn’t been interrupted in
the kitchen, I had to admit it would have been weird to kiss him
after being reunited for such a short time, especially considering we
hadn’t seen each other in years. I wasn’t a prude, but I also
wasn’t the type of girl who moved that
quickly.
Even
if I may have wanted to…
I
watched Dean wrestle his boots onto his feet before slipping into his
coat. “I saw a flyer downtown yesterday for some big Christmas
concert happening tonight at Town Hall. Maybe we could go to that,
then see where the night takes us?”
The
Christmas concert. Damn! I’d forgotten all about it. Every year
local groups got together and put on a variety show of sorts—the
dance school did a short rendition of The Nutcracker, the choir led a
sing-along, and the elementary and high schools did different skits
and musical acts. Grama had been on the organization committee for
years and I’d always helped her.
With
my Christmas spirit waning fast, Town Hall was the last place I
wanted to be tonight. Dean was looking at me with a mixture of hope
and expectation, so I said, “The Christmas concert sounds great.”
“Perfect.”
He leaned toward me and I was sure he was going to kiss me, but
instead he whispered in my ear, “I hope they have mistletoe at this
concert.” He brushed his lips over my cheek and stepped back to
meet my eyes with a devilish smile. “I’ll pick you up at six?”
I
nodded mutely, stepping numbly out of the way when he moved past me
to open the door. He stood in the doorway for a moment, regarding me
with an unreadable expression.
“It’s
really good to see you again, Ginny.”
“It’s
really good to see you again too, Dean. I hope we’ll be seeing a
lot more of each other.”
Dean’s
smile widened, and I realized I should have chosen my words a little
more carefully. “I hope so too. I’ll see you tonight.”
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