Difference between revisions of "Red's Hot Honky Tonk Bar"

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[[Category:2009 Releases]]
 
[[Category:2009 Releases]]
 
[[Category:Mainstream]]
 
[[Category:Mainstream]]
* '''Series''': [[]]
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* '''Series''': That Business Between Us #1
 
* '''Author''': [[Pamela Morsi]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Pamela Morsi]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[MIRA]]
 
* '''Publisher''': [[MIRA]]
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* '''Editor''': [[Valerie Gray]]
 
* '''Editor''': [[Valerie Gray]]
 
* '''Amazon Listing''': []
 
* '''Amazon Listing''': []
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==Book Description==
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Unruly Red knows she's no one's idea of a sweet old granny. But with one long-distance phone call, the fortysomething bar owner with the tattoos and tight jeans is suddenly responsible for two young grandchildren she hardly knows.
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Red's rowdy friends, late-night lifestyle and tiny apartment above her San Antonio saloon definitely aren't kidproof. And Red's pretty sure the hot young fiddle player she's been dallying with will run for the hills when he learns she has a daughter, let alone grandkids.
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But Red is about to learn that age doesn't necessarily come with wisdom. That a nine-year-old girl can be as exacting as the strictest parent. That the school of hard knocks never had bake sales. And that her boy toy is more of an adult than she is.
  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
== Recognitions ==  
 
* [[2010 RITA® Winners & Finalists|2010 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Mainstream Fiction with a Central Romance Category|Novel with Strong Romantic Elements]]
 
* [[2010 RITA® Winners & Finalists|2010 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Mainstream Fiction with a Central Romance Category|Novel with Strong Romantic Elements]]

Latest revision as of 02:29, 19 August 2021

Book Description

Unruly Red knows she's no one's idea of a sweet old granny. But with one long-distance phone call, the fortysomething bar owner with the tattoos and tight jeans is suddenly responsible for two young grandchildren she hardly knows.

Red's rowdy friends, late-night lifestyle and tiny apartment above her San Antonio saloon definitely aren't kidproof. And Red's pretty sure the hot young fiddle player she's been dallying with will run for the hills when he learns she has a daughter, let alone grandkids.

But Red is about to learn that age doesn't necessarily come with wisdom. That a nine-year-old girl can be as exacting as the strictest parent. That the school of hard knocks never had bake sales. And that her boy toy is more of an adult than she is.

Recognitions