Shay Zucconi is at a dead end. She’s just been dumped, she’s jobless, and her grandmother’s will has a bizarre stipulation: to inherit the family tulip farm in Friendship, Rhode Island, Shay has to live there for a year and get married.
Canterbary is a master of tension. The transition from "fake" to "real" is paced beautifully, focusing on how they integrate into each other's daily lives before the physical payoff. In a Jam by Kate Canterbary
Noah’s daughter, Gennie, is one of the best-written kids in contemporary romance. She isn’t just a prop; she has a distinct, precocious personality that adds genuine heart (and humor) to the story. Shay Zucconi is at a dead end
Enter Noah Barrows: a grumpier-than-average widower, a single dad, and Shay’s former childhood bully/friend. To save the farm, they enter into a marriage of convenience that—shocker—becomes anything but convenient. Why It Works The transition from "fake" to "real" is paced