"Seer Bradley is all sharp edges—whether it's knives in the kitchen, swords as a renfaire noble, or her quick tongue behind the bar. She likes to stay busy; protected within the glass walls she's built to keep herself, and her heart, safe and sound. One night with a handsome Scot tests the stability of her carefully constructed life, leaving her reeling.
It's fine.
Harry MacLaren is starting over. He's got priorities after moving across an ocean for the sake of his daughter—get settled in Texas, maybe find a D&D group, and try to forget the woman who knocked his world off balance this summer. Unfortunately, those priorities shift when he realizes that his one night stand with a witty bartender could jeopardize the community he so desperately needs as a single parent.
Everything's fine.
When Harry and his family need temporary refuge, Seer offers her home as an option, despite her better judgement. She thinks they'll be passing ships, relying on her walls to keep growing feelings in check. As they settle into a new routine, her edges start to dull, and Harry is determined to show what a life without walls could look like.
It'll all be fine.
Contains mature themes."
"'If I'm too much, go find less.'
In the bingo card of life, Piper Delmonico did not expect to mark out the squares 'widowed' and 'sober' before her ten year high school reunion. Pushing 30, designing lingerie for a manager who wouldn't know silk from satin, and constantly waiting for the other shoe to drop, she finds herself face to face with someone who witnessed, first hand, the very public demise of her good girl reputation. Thrown together a decade later, Piper expects 'Marble Man' Fitz Westfall, the golden boy with the stoic face, to be another person telling her she's too much. But does recently-divorced Fitz, with his head in the sand, really know as much about Piper as he thinks he does? He realizes she may be just what he needs to know that he's not truly made of stone.
Go Find Less is a first person, dual perspective contemporary romance that highlights the triumph of overcoming grief and loss while creating a new sense of self.
Contains mature themes."