Title:
Beside Your Heart
Author: Mary Whitney
Genre:
New Adult Romance
Publish Date: June
17, 2013
Event Organized By: Literati Literature Lovers
Synopsis:
Late one night Nicki Johnson plays with emotional
fire and Googles her high school love, only to find his name splashed across
the British gossip columns. Back in his native England, Adam Kincaid is
successful and dating a woman from an aristocratic family like his own. With a
career in politics, Nicki’s no slouch, but she knows Adam is living a world
away from her life. Yet there was a time he was no farther than the next
locker. Nicki will never forget their year together in high school—the year of
her sister’s death, the year her mother checked out. Adam helped Nicki through
suffocating grief, and she led him through a coming of age. Was it just high
school, or was it something more?
Beside Your Heart
Excerpt:
“No British literature. Isn’t this supposed to be
an English class?” Adam asked.
“Uh.” My ancestors would’ve been proud of the
jolt of American patriotism that hit me.
“There was a revolution two hundred years ago. We write our own books
now.”
He leaned back in his seat with a smile. “I think
I heard about that.”
“We still share the same language.”
“Sometimes I’m not too sure.”
“I bet not.” I could imagine what he thought of a
Texas accent.
He picked
up the list of books again. “What about
Catcher in the Rye?”
“I read it a long time ago when I was, like,
eleven.” I laughed a little as I remembered how I’d first come to read it.
“Is there something funny about that?”
“Yeah. My father had suggested I read it then.
The book is the classic coming-of-age story. Clearly, he wasn’t really thinking
about whether or not it was appropriate for an eleven-year-old.”
“Really? Why?”
“Well, for one thing, the main character is a guy
who swears a lot.”
“I suppose I swear a lot.” He cracked a sly
smile. “At least compared to you Yankees.”
“Yankees? You’re in the South.” I laughed.
“What else is inappropriate about the book? Now
I’m interested. It can’t only be a few swear words.”
“No, it’s not just that. It’s…” I hesitated for a
moment as I realized I was about to bring up the topic of sex with Adam
Kincaid. What the hell, I thought. I
should be matter-of-fact about it. He had a girlfriend and would never want
anything with me. I could hide I thought he was hot, so I shrugged. “Holden,
the main character…he’s a little sexually frustrated.”
His eyes twinkled, and it felt as if my words
hung in the air. I wanted to squirm in my seat. ‘Sexually frustrated’—like me checking out Adam Kincaid.
His proper upbringing showed again as he
sidestepped the issue, yet he smirked. “That sounds like an adventurous book to
be on an American high school syllabus.”
“Like I said—it’s considered an American
classic.” I laughed. “I guess some things are sacred.”
“But of course.” The gleam appeared in his eye
again, and he turned toward me in his seat. “Teenage sexual frustration is sort
of a rite of passage, if you will.”
There went the good-English-boy manners out the
window. His tone, the look in his eye, his body language—was he flirting with
or taunting me? I decided the former was impossible, and if the latter, I
wasn’t going to back down. With two parents who were lawyers, debate was a
family routine.
“A rite of passage? More like a biological fact,
isn’t it?” I asked, casually clicking my pen. I raised a brow. “Especially for
guys.”
“You’re right about that,” he said with a grin.
His eyes shifted downward, and I could feel him
give me a once-over. I wondered what he thought. I was no Meredith, but I had
enough self-confidence to know I wasn’t butt-ugly either—even with my scars. I
couldn’t tell, but he’d distracted me so much, I jumped when I heard Mrs.
Anderson ask, “Your name, dear?”
About the author:
Even before
she graduated from law school, Mary knew she wasn't cut out to be a real
lawyer. Drawn to politics, she's spent her career as an organizer, lobbyist,
and nonprofit executive. Nothing piques her interest more than a good political
scandal or romance, and when she stumbled upon writing, she put the two
together. A born Midwesterner, naturalized Texan, and transient resident of
Washington, D.C., Mary now lives in Northern California with her two daughters
and real lawyer husband.
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