Brotherhood. Club. Family. They live and ride by their own rules. These are the Raven Riders... Wild with grief over the death of his wife, Sam “Slider” Evans merely lives for his two sons. Nothing holds his interest anymore—not even riding his bike or his membership in the Raven Riders Motorcycle Club. But that all changes when he hires a new babysitter. Recently freed from a bad situation by the Ravens, Cora Campbell is determined to bury the past. When Slider offers her a nanny position, she accepts, needing the security and time to figure out what she wants from life. Cora adores his sweet boys, but never expected the red-hot attraction to their brooding, sexy father. If only he would notice her... Slider does see the beautiful, fun-loving woman he invited into his home. She makes him feel too much, and he both hates it and yearns for it. But when Cora witnesses something she shouldn’t have, the new lives they’ve only just discovered are threatened. Now Slider must claim—and protect—what’s his before it’s too late.
Tired of staying in the yard all the time, Stanley the dog finds a secret way out and heads out for a night on the town where he chases cats, raids garbage cans, and takes the ride of his life on a skateboard down a steep hill.
Using many never-reported facts, award-winning writer Anne Hagedorn Auerbach chronicles the compelling and tragic story behind the downfall of Thoroughbred racing's crown jewel.
Swindle meets Ferris Bueller's Day Off in this action-filled comedy!
Major Garrett has been reporting on the White House for nearly two decades, covering four different presidencies for three news outlets.
Jim Warvell's long-awaited memoir takes us back to a special time in American history: a true period piece in Western entertainment from the '50s, '60s, and '70s, when specialty acts were at the height of their popularity.This is also a ...
In 'Wild Ride', Adam Lashinsky, veteran Fortune writer and author of 'Inside Apple', traces the story of Uber's meteoric rise: from its murky origins to its plans for expansion into radically different industries.
Ghosts Don't Ride Wild Horses
Throughout the book, Arceneaux encourages readers to fight for the life they want, saying, You have to hold on, because you don’t know what great thing can come and change your life.
I need people like my family, but I don't seem to need the things that other people do. Durin' that time, I was so desperately ... When I was young, Mama was my keeper, and Daddy was my keeper.” This is a curious admission coming from ...
"Is the mysterious man that the kids meet on a class trip really the ghost of Coyote Pete? "--Back coverer.