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The Rookie (Looking to Score Book 3)-Kendall Ryan

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A new, sexy standalone from New York Times bestseller, Kendall Ryan.He has everything a man could want. A lucrative hockey contract. Adoring fans. A family who loves him.But he’s about to throw it all away. Logan Tate’s name is dominating the headlines for all the wrong reasons. Instead of goals and assists, the talented young defenseman has been racking up fights and suspensions.I work with athletes who are struggling, but Logan’s different. He’s not just going to blow his season, but his entire career. And now he can’t return to the ice until he deals with his issues, but the stubborn man won’t let anyone get close enough to help.Which is why I packed up and followed him to his family’s property in the remote mountains of Colorado. He can’t avoid me here.The only problem?I can’t avoid him either. He’s chopping wood and building fires, rescuing my car from snowy ditches, and inviting me to Sunday dinners with his loud extended family. He’s a whole lot of man, but beneath all those hard edges is an unexpected tenderness.Tempted or not, I have to stay out of his bed and get him back to the ice . . . no matter how difficult that might be.This is a sizzling new romance in the Looking to Score series. Each book can be read as a standalone.

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Logan’s dream is to play hockey but having made it to the major leagues, his world is shaken with the death of his father. Suddenly, he finds himself being torn between hockey and feeling he should be back home to help his family. The result is explosive and reckless behavior on the ice that gets him suspended. Summer is working to build a new practice as a sport psychologist so she follows Logan to Colorado to convince him to work with her on his anger issues. The challenge is getting him to open up and realize that he needs someone to talk to deal with all the changes that have been happening in his life. What Summer doesn’t expect is to be embraced by this loud and loving family, something she has missed in her life. Being an only child of a single parent, when her mother passed away, she found herself alone in the world. I love how this relationship evolved for both of them. I was pulled in and rooting for them to get past their fears and keep it honest. Logan’s family is a wonderful support system for both of them and adds the perfect amount of humor.
More Small Town Than Hockey, This Story Is About Grief & Moving On. It Takes You Into The World Of The Tate Family In The Remote Colorado Town Of Lost Haven.This is book three of the Looking to Score series about the Boston Titans NHL team. It is a standalone. There is no overlap between this book and the first two in the series other than the incidental mention of Alex and a few other teammates and staff of the Boston Titans. Very little of this story actually takes place in Boston.THE SERIES INCLUDES (THUS FAR):1. The Rebel (Holt Rossi & Eden Wynn’s story)2. The Rival (Alex Braun & Aspen Ford’s story)3. The Rookie (Logan Tate &4. The Rebound (Saint & Kinley’s story)FROM THE REBEL, BOOK ONE:This story opens as the hockey season is about to begin.Eden Wynn, roughly twenty-seven, is from Massachusetts royalty. Her grandfather – Grandpa Pete – had been owner of the Boston Titans since she was small, and her father had been governor while she was in high school. Her family was connected. But not everything is perfect behind the scenes of the elite, and to her horror the entire world knew some of her family’s baggage when her father was caught in a compromising position while still in office. That scandal only brought more pressure to bear on her shoulders. She would need to prove herself, and she was determined to make that happen. she knew she needed to challenge herself to step out of her comfort zone. She needed to be a little reckless, a little less boring. And she didn’t hesitate to do things once she made up her mind. Her family mantra: Wynn at all costs.Alex Braun was on a hockey scholarship, and rumor had it he would be signing with the NHL and skipping his senior year at Sutton. He was going to be a star. When a dare at a party led to a kiss, Eden set her sights on him. He would be her reckless fun. Certainly he was rumored to have the coeds at his beck and call, but all she wanted was some fun. Some other ideas slipped into her consciousness, too – like the idea that together they would make a great power couple.Holt Rossi might not play hockey, but he is a bear of a man. He and Eden had taken some classes together during freshman and sophomore year, before he declared his major in criminal justice. They had even worked on a project together. He couldn’t help but fall a little for her, though he knew she was out of his league. Abandoned at a young age by his father and raised by his drunk mother, he never had much of a childhood. His older brother landed in prison, and Holt decided as a teen he needed to escape that life. His academic scholarship to Sutton University was too good to be true, just like the notion that someone like Eden might choose someone like him. When they somehow crossed paths at a party during junior year, he knew she was interested in meeting Braun there. He couldn’t believe she ended up in his bedroom with him instead. That she talked and opened up, and he did the same. And then what followed….Eden had chosen one man. Six years later, Eden is once again with both men before her, wondering if she made the wrong decision. Wondering where she might be now if she had chosen differently. Even Alex was surprised when he put his playing days behind to have a relationship with Eden. They spent five years together, with her following his career. But eventually the novelty wore off and Alex withdrew. With rumors of cheating in the tabloids, who eagerly gobbled up stories about the couple, it was hard to know what to believe. When their relationship blew up six months ago, Eden was thankful that she had begun spending her spare time with her Grandpa Pete for the last three years. He had begun to groom her to take over running the Titans herself one day, so she was able to throw herself into her career when Alex left.But her grandfather’s sudden death put everything in question. A battle ensued, but Eden finally won the right to keep the team. If only the public had supported her victory it would have been a real celebration. As it is, she is hated by the fans, not respected by the team, and the target of much mean-spirited speculation in the tabloids. As a woman and the youngest owner in the league, the consensus is that she should sell the team. Nobody believes the team will be successful under her leadership. And to make matters worse, during her legal battle, Alex got traded to the Titans. She is now his boss.Eden might have an elite background, but that doesn’t insulate her from heartbreak. She meets two men at Sutton University – one on an athletic scholarship and the other on an academic one. Alex Braun will be an NHL star, and Holt Rossi is the loner bad boy who patiently sat by her side. She later learns that choices have consequences. This story is well-written. The plot is somewhat complex early on; it later focuses more on the couple’s developing relationship, which is tentative and slow to build. The drama is more in the background as the couple finally begins to move forward. There is no cheating, but a few challenges do sneak their way in later in the story. It sets up book two of the series (though both are standalones). The characters are well-developed, particularly Eden. The history and background add more depth. Holt maintains a little more mystery. The story is written in first person. The POV alternates between Holt and Eden. I rate this story 4.5 stars.FROM THE RIVAL, BOOK 2:This book opens during the off-season the next summer.Alex Braun, roughly twenty-eight, has learned a few things since his very public breakup with Eden Wynn just over a year ago. He had enjoyed being a bachelor once again, and the puck bunnies were appreciative of his new status, too. But much of the last year hadn’t gone as expected. With his trade to the Boston Titans, there were high expectations for his career, but the starting center didn’t live up to the hype. Some fans suggested he was too interested in hookups to give the game his full attention .He also had a rocky welcome to the team. It took a little bit of time for the players to embrace him, but that paled in comparison to his relationship with the Titans owner – his ex-girlfriend. She took over ownership following her grandfather’s death, and working for the woman he walked out on months earlier was more than awkward. But watching her fall in love with Holt Rossi was even more uncomfortable. It was a long season, but he finally learned a few things about himself. He is tired of the endless hookups, and his sister may be right about him pushing people away. It might have taken him a while, but Alex finally seems to be ready to grow up. The problem is that all the trouble he had gotten into over the last year, thanks to his impulsive behavior, is catching up with him now. His career is on the line, and a lot hinges on his reputation. He has been warned to keep a low profile over the summer and to stay out of trouble. His second season with the Titans is still uncertain.Aspen Ford, turning twenty-five, just went through a rough breakup. She met Dale when she was twenty and they attended Harvard together. She had devoted herself to him, but she eventually realized that their relationship was not a two-way street. She had fallen for him before knowing him well. With hindsight, she realizes that she had been excusing his behavior for quite some time and thus failed to notice the red flags. Unfortunately, leaving Dale left her homeless. She is fortunate to not only be Eden Wynn’s executive assistant, but also her friend. Eden and her fiancĂ© Holt have kindly welcomed her in their home for the past two weeks, but Aspen knows it is time to move forward and find an apartment of her own. So when Alex Braun suggests that taking the summer caretaker position for Saint’s lake property in Ottawa might be a great way to help heal her broken heart, the timing couldn’t be more perfect.Alex can’t help his attraction to Eden’s assistant despite knowing better. But acting on that attraction with Aspen is wrong in so many ways. Aside from the fact that she is Eden’s friend, Aspen doesn’t seem like a one night stand kind of girl. And even though Alex is ready for a relationship personally, he cannot afford to be seen with women any time soon. He heads up to his teammate Saint’s cabin for the weekend to do some of the heavy lifting he had promised to help with, and the two find a level of comfort with one another that is surprising. They develop a friendship over the summer, and the lake house becomes a magical sort of bubble that keeps the world and its worries at bay. But as the new season approaches, uncertainty about what that might mean begins to weigh on them. The life of a hockey player is trying at times, and much of that time is spent on the road. Eden remains their boss, and her relationship with them both makes things complicated. They each face some self-reflection if there is any hope of making something real together. The couple eventually finds a happy ending.Alex and Aspen’s sweet romance is about two people nursing broken hearts and unexpectedly finding love with one another. Their summer at the lake house gives them the time and space to realize just how perfect they are together. The story is nicely written. The plot is simple. The characters have some depth. Much more is known about Alex’s character, from books one and two collectively. Aspen’s background is brief. The story is written in first person. The POV alternates between Alex and Aspen. I rate this book four stars.IN THIS BOOK:This story opens in October as the new season begins.Logan Tate, twenty-three, is known as the rookie. It is the beginning of his second season as a defenseman on the Boston Titans, and he isn’t living up to his $2.6 million NHL contract. His teammates are losing faith, but more importantly, the management isn’t pleased with his performance. He is having a bit of an identity crisis. Hockey has been his life for years. His family had sacrificed to support his dreams, but he doesn’t know what he wants anymore. He isn’t even interested in women. There had been one last year, but it turned out she was superficial and it ended. The competition on the ice is fierce now that he is playing pro-hockey, and finding his place amongst such talent isn’t easy. He hasn’t been able to clear his head of questions this season, which is impacting his game. Time seems to be running out. What he wants most of all is his father’s advice, but that won’t be coming. His father passed away over the summer, and even though his heart is back at home with his family in Colorado, he listened to his mom and retuned for the season because his dad would have wanted that.When Logan gets violent on the ice yet again and gets ejected, causing his team the game, his suspension is inevitable. Eight games, a serious consequence. But his return to the team is not guaranteed, either. Coach Wilder requires Logan to get a therapist to sign off before he gets ice time again.. He must satisfy the therapist that his anger is under control. Coach gives him three names to choose from and instructs him to set it up, but all Logan wants to do it hop on a plane and return home to Lost Haven, Colorado, to his mother, Grandpa Al, and his three brothers – Graham, Austen, and Matt. His family is hurting with his father’s recent death as well as the consequent scramble for his brothers to find a viable way to keep their sixty acre property – the piece of land that had been his father’s dream, and the lifestyle that comes with it.Summer Campbell, roughly twenty-four, needs a break. Following your dream and starting your own practice as a sports psychologist doesn’t come without risk, and if she doesn’t catch some luck soon she might not make her rent. Since she lost her mother two years ago, she has been alone in the world. She never knew her father and has nobody left to turn to. The closest she has to family is Les Benson, the front officer manager of the Boston Titans, for whom she had interned during college. She had studied sports management, and he had become a mentor. She graduated with a degree in sports medicine, but physical therapy didn’t satisfy her so she got her master’s degree in psychology. A recent grad, she hopes to continue to work with athletes, but to help them in a different way with her counseling services.Les was kind enough to give Summer the name of a young rookie who may lose his career if he doesn’t learn how to control his anger. Logan Tate needs written approval from a therapist before he returns to play, and he hasn’t decided on a therapist yet. Logan’s career is hanging by a thread, so with the hope of gaining a high-profile client that will help jump-start her counseling business, she does something unconventional and follows him home to Colorado. With student loans and other bills coming in each month, failure is not an option. She just needs to get him to agree to do the sessions with her, then she can fly back home to Boston by the week’s end and finish out the sessions remotely should Logan remain with his family for the duration of his suspension.Logan and Summer’s story starts out with a lot of antagonism as Summer feels like a fish out of water and Logan is still dealing with anger issues. Lost Haven is a tiny mountain town with just over six hundred people, nothing like Boston. The Tate family is unlike anything Summer has experienced. They are loud and busy. Fighting amongst the four brothers is rather commonplace. Jillian, Logan’s mother and a recent widow, keeps the family together with her overbearing ways and home-cooked meals. Grandpa Al, Logan’s paternal grandfather, always has interesting stories to tell and isn’t afraid to share his opinions. As Logan does his best to get rid of Summer, his family welcomes her into the fold. Logan’s stubborn refusal to come to terms with his father’s death remains her biggest obstacle to returning to Boston, but Summer soon finds that Lost Haven and the Tate family are everything she could ever want – a sense of family and belonging. As the two slowly get to know one another, their feelings begin to change. But Summer is only in Lost Haven to secure a job, and Logan still doesn’t know what he wants for his future. The couple eventually earns a happy ending.Book four’s story is whispered near the end of this book. Saint and team captain Reeves are having issues. Saint’s story comes in book four, The Rebound, which is his story with his neighbor Kinley, who happens to be Reeves’ pregnant little sister.Logan and Summer’s story takes the reader into the world of the Tate family on sixty mountainous acres near the remote Colorado town of Lost Haven. The family is tight, but the loss of the father leaves them mourning his death while trying to save his dream. Graham, the eldest son, steps up take charge of the monumental task, but it means the stoic figure rarely has time for even a smile. The family has spent ten years on the property and was only just getting it to the point that it might turn a profit. The family is fantastic, and their story is rewarding. Although it would conceivably never fit into this series, it reads like there might be more stories yet to come from the Tate family. Graham’s romance with Ella Emerson is set up as a slight age gap story.There are a few issues that merit mention. First, it is a little hard to piece together the various terms related to Summer’s studies and professions. At times it feels inconsistent, but I have tried to lay it out altogether above in a way that helps it to make sense. Next, Logan’s suspension is eight games. I am no hockey expert, but I believe that would only keep him off the ice for perhaps two and a half weeks, give or take. The story is vague on this point. Sometimes the story makes it feel much longer. There is a point where Logan has not seen Summer in weeks, but that feels like a stretch. It comes across as more like a week, give or take. Nevertheless, the story remains enjoyable to read.Logan and Summer’s story is more small town than hockey, but it doesn’t disappoint. It is about grief and moving on. Logan puts up a good front, but underneath the surface is a vulnerability and softness that most don’t know exist. People see him as violent, but that is just a symptom of his need for an outlet. Summer helps him to manage that anger while also getting the opportunity to see what a real family feels like. She is desperate to have that for herself, but learning how much she is missing out on makes her feel her own loneliness tenfold. Their sweet and steamy feel-good story has you rooting for the rookie. It is nicely written. The plot is fairly simple, but there are various characters that keep things busy, so the reader is kept guessing about what direction things will eventually go. The characters are carefully crafted. The cast of characters is wonderful. The story is written in first person. The POV alternates between Logan and Summer. I rate this book four stars.I received an advance copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review.

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