For this blog tour, we’re looking at a fairly standard Hallmarkie type romance. For this blog tour, we’re looking at Talulah’s Back In Town by Brenda Novak.
Here’s what I had to say on the review sites (Goodreads, Hardcover.app, TheStoryGraph, BookHype):
Fairly Standard Hallmarkie Type Romance – And There Is Absolutely Nothing Wrong With That. This is one of those fairly standard Hallmarkie type romances that meets up with a touch of Runaway Bride with real-world type complications, particularly in a small town. There is even a minor *hint* of danger (without ever really feeling too suspenseful, more as a touch of “spice” than anything). In other words, those – not even that arguably *millions* – who read romance books and/ or watch Hallmark movies as pure, mostly light, escapism… hey, this book is *exactly* in that vein and thus will be *exactly* what you’re looking for. For those who don’t like such tales… well, again, this *is* that type of tale. So don’t leave a 1* review because it didn’t exactly break any new ground or because it had some sex scenes and cursing and such. I’ve already told you pretty well *exactly* what to expect here, so the fact that you’re reading this particular review means that you can’t say *no one* warned you. I have! đ
But again, for the millions – *and millions!* (to channel a bit of The Rock) – who want some romantic type drama complete with all that this entails… welcome home. Very much recommended.
After the jump, an excerpt from the book followed by the “publisher details” – book description, author bio, and social media and buy links.
One
âWell, if it isnât the runaway bride.â
Talulah Barclay glanced up to find the reason a shadow had just fallen across her plate. Sheâd been hoping to ease back into the small community of Coyote Canyon, Montana, without drawing any attention. But Brant Elway, of all people, had happened to come into the cafĂ© where she was having breakfast and stopped at her booth.
âOf course youâd be the first to bring up my past sins,â she grumbled. They hadnât seen each other for nearly fourteen years, and heâd certainly changedâfilled out what had once been a spare frame, grown a couple of inches, even though heâd been tall to begin with, and taken on a rugged, slightly weathered look from spending so much time outdoors. But she wouldâve recognized him anywhere.
The crooked smile that curved his lips suggested he was hardly repentant. âIâm not likely to forget that day. I was the best man, remember?â
She wasnât likely to forget that day, either. Only bumping into her ex, Charlie Gerhart, would be more cringeworthy.
She felt terrible about what sheâd done to Charlie. She also felt terrible that sheâd repeated the same mistake with two other men since. Admittedly, jilting her fiancĂ©s at the altar hadnât been among her finest moments, but sheâd had every intention of following throughâuntil the panic grew so powerful it simply took over and there was no other way to cope.
It said something that, while she regretted the pain sheâd caused others, especially her prospective grooms, she didnât regret walking out on those weddings. That clearly indicated sheâd made the right choiceâa little late, perhaps, but better not to make such a huge mistake than try to unravel it later.
She doubted Brant would ever view the situation from that perspective, however. Heâd naturally feel defensive of Charlie. He and Charlie had been friends for as long as she could remember. Sheâd hung out with Charlieâs younger sister, Averil, since kindergarten and could remember seeing Brant over at the Gerhart house way back when she and Averil were in fifth grade, and he and Charlie were in seventh.Dressed in a soft cotton Elway Ranch T-shirt that stretched slightly at the sleeves to accommodate his biceps, a pair of faded Wranglers and boots that were worn and dirty enough to prove they werenât just for show, he rested his hands on his narrow hips as he studied her with the cornflower-blue eyes thatâd been the subject of so much slumber-party talk when she was growing up. Those eyes were even more startling now that his face was so tanned. Had he lived in Seattle, like her, sheâd assume he spent time cultivating that golden glow. But she knew he hadnât put any effort into his appearance. According to Jane Tanner, another friend whoâd hung out with her and Averilâthe three of them had been inseparableâBrantâs parents had retired, and he and his three younger brothers had taken over the running of their two-thousand-acre cattle ranch.
âWhat brings you back to town?â he asked. âYouâve laid low for so long, I thought weâd seen the last of you.â
Pretending that running into him was no more remarkable to her than running into anyone else, she lifted her orange juice to take a sip before returning the glass to the heavily varnished table. âMy aunt Phoebe died.â
âThatâs the old lady who lived in the farmhouse on Mill Creek Road, right? The one with the blue hair?â
Her great-aunt had been a diminutive woman, only five feet tall and less than a hundred pounds. But sheâd had her hair done once a week like clockworkâstill used the blue rinse sheâd grown fond of in her early twenties when platinum blond had been all the rageâand dressed in her Sunday best, including nylons, whenever she came to town. So sheâd stood out. âThatâs her.â
âWhat happened?â
Talulah got the impression he was assessing the changes in her, just as she was assessing the changes in him, and wished sheâd put more effort into her appearance today. She didnât want to come off the worse for wear after what sheâd done. But when sheâd rolled out of bed, pulled on her yoga pants and a sleeveless knit top and piled her long blond hair on top of her head before coming to the diner for breakfast, sheâd assumed sheâd be early enough to miss the younger crowd, which included the people sheâd rather avoid.
That had proven mostly to be true; except for Brant, almost everyone else in the diner was over sixty. But he worked on a ranch, so he was probably up even before the birds thatâd been chirping loudly outside her window, making it impossible for her to sleep another second. âShe died of old age. Aunt Phoebe was almost a hundred.â
âIâm sorry to hear you lost her.â He sounded sincere, at least. âWere you close?â
âNo, actually, we werenât,â Talulah admitted. âShe never liked me.â Phoebe hadnât liked children in generalâthey were too loud, too unruly and too messy. And once Talulah had become a teenager, and her mother had allowed her to quit taking piano lessons from her great-aunt, theyâd never really connected, other than seeing each other at various family functions during which Talulah and her sister, Debbie, had gone out of their way to avoid their motherâs crotchety aunt.
His teeth flashed in a wider smile. âMaybe she was a friend of the Gerharts.â
Talulah gave him a dirty look. âSo were you. But unfortunately, youâre standing here talking to me.â
He chuckled instead of being offended, which soothed some of her ire. He was willing to take what he was dishing out; she had to respect that.
âIâm more generous than most,â he teased, pressing a hand to his muscular chest. âBut if it makes you feel any better, youâre not the only one who struggled to get along with your aunt.â
âYou knew her personally?â she asked in surprise.
âNot well, but Iâll never forget the day someone had the audacity to honk at her because she was driving at the speed of a horse and buggy down the middle of the highway, holding up traffic for miles.â
âWhat happened?â
âOnce I got around her, I found she was capable of driving a lot faster. She tailgated me to the bank, where she climbed out and swung her purse at me while giving me a piece of her mind for scaring her while she was behind the wheel.â
Talulah had to laugh at the mental picture that created. âYouâre the one who honked at her?â
âThe bank was about to close.â He gave a low whistle as he rubbed the beard growth on his squarish chin. âBut after that, I decided if I was ever in the same situation again, Iâd skip the bank.â
Most people in Coyote Canyon probably had a similar story about Aunt Phoebe, maybe more than one. She mightâve been small, but she was mighty and wouldnât âtake any guff,â as she put it, from anyone. âYeah, well, imagine being a little girl on the receiving end of that sharp tongue. Iâd dread my weekly piano lesson and cry whenever my mother left me with her.â
âIâll have to let Ellen know that,â he said.
Talulah didnât remember anyone by that name in Coyote Canyon. âWhoâs Ellen?â
âI assume youâre staying at your auntâs place?â
She nodded. âMy folks moved to Reno a couple of years after I embarrassed them at the wedding,â she said glumly.
He laughed at her response. âEllen lives on the property next to you. She and I used to go out now and then, when she first moved to town, and she told me the old lady would knock on her door to complain about everythingâthe weeds near the fence, trees that were dropping leaves on her side of the property line, the barking of the dogs.â
âBut they both live on several acres. How could those small things bother Aunt Phoebe?â
âExactly Ellenâs point. Heaven forbid she ever decided to have a dinner party and someone parked too close to your auntâs driveway.â
Talulah found herself more distracted by the mention of his relationship with this Ellen woman than she shouldâve been, given that it wasnât the point of the anecdote. Brant had always been so hard to attract. Most girls she knew had tried to gain his interest, including her own sister, and failed. So she couldnât help being curious about how heâd come to date her new neighborâand why and how their relationship had ended. âSounds like Phoebe.â
A waitress called out to tell Brant hello, and he waved at her before returning his attention to Talulah. âHow long will you be in town?â
She arched an eyebrow at him. âAre you running recognizance for my enemies?â
âJust curious.â He winked. âWord will spread fast enough without me.â
âYou can assure everyone who cares that itâll only be for a month or so,â she said. âUntil I can clean out my great auntâs house and put it on the market.â
âIf you werenât close to her, how come you were unlucky enough to get that job?â he asked.
âMy parents are in Africa on a mission.â
âFor the Church of the Good Shepherd?â
âYeah.â
âI didnât realize they sent people out on organized missions.â
âSometimes they do, but this one is self-funded, something my dad has wanted to do ever since hearing a particularly rousing sermon.â Talulah wasnât religious at allâmuch to the chagrin of her parents. But a good portion of the town belonged to her folksâ evangelical church or one of the other churches in the area.
âWhat about your sister?â Brant asked. âShe canât help?â
âDebbieâs married and living in Billings. Sheâs about to have her fourth child any day now.â
He feigned shock. âMarried? Fear of commitment doesnât run in the family, I guess.â
She scowled. âItâs a good thing I didnât go through with it, Brant. I was only eighteenâway too young.â
âI never said I thought it was a good idea,â he responded.
âIf youâll remember, I made the same argument way back when.â
âHow could I ever forget?â Theyâd always been adversaries. Heâd hated the amount of time his best friend had devoted to her, and sheâd resented that he was often trying to talk Charlie into playing pool or going hunting or something with him instead. âBut letâs be fair. I doubt Iâm the only one with commitment issues.â She glanced at his hand. âI donât see a ring on your finger.â
âIâve never left anyone standing at the altar.â
She could tell he was joking, but heâd hit a nerve. âBecause you bail out before it even gets that far.â
He seemed to enjoy provoking her. âThatâs what youâre supposed to do. I can teach you how, if you want me to.â
âOh, leave me alone,â she muttered with a shooing motion.
He chuckled but didnât go. âHow much are you hoping to get for your auntâs house?â
âI have no idea what itâs worth,â she replied. âI live in Washington these days, where prices are a lot different, and havenât met with a real estate agent yet.â
âYou know Charlieâs an agent, right?â
Slumping back against the booth, she sighed. âHere we go againâŠâ
He widened those gorgeous blue eyes of his. âThat wasnât a jab! I just thought you should be aware of it.â
âIâm aware of it, okay? Jane Tanner told me.â
âYou still in touch with Jane?â
âWeâve been friends since kindergarten,â she said as if he shouldâve taken that for granted. But sheâd been equally close to Charlieâs sister, and they hadnât spoken since Talulah had tried to apologize for what sheâd done at the wedding and Averil had told her she never wanted to see her again.
âMaybe itâd help patch things up if you listed your auntâs house with him,â Brant suggested.
âYouâre kidding. I canât imagine heâd want to see meânot even to make a buck.â
His eyes flicked to the compass tattoo sheâd gotten on the inside of her forearm shortly after sheâd left Coyote Canyon. âDoes he know youâre in town?â
She shrugged. âJane mightâve told him I was coming. Why?â
He studied her for a long moment. âI have a feeling things are about to get interesting around here. Thanks for breaking the monotony,â he said, and that maddening grin reappeared as he nodded in parting and walked over to the bar, where he took a stool and ordered his breakfast.
Disgruntled, Talulah eyed his back. Heâd removed his baseball capâthat was a bit old-fashioned, perhaps, but her parents would certainly approve of his mannersâso his hair was matted in places, but he didnât seem to care. He came off more comfortable in his own skin than any man sheâd ever known, which sort of bugged her. She couldnât say why. Heâd always seemed to avoid the foibles that everyone else got caught up in. For a change, she wanted to see him unable to stop himself from falling in love, do something stupid because he couldnât help it or make a mistake he later regretted.
âWould you like a refill?â
The waitress had approached with a pot of coffee.
Talulah shoved her cup away. âNo, thanks. Iâm finished.â
âOkay, hon. Let me put this down, and Iâll be right back with your check.â
Leaving twenty-five bucks on the table, more than enough to cover the bill, Talulah got up and walked out.
The last thing she wanted was to run into someone else she knew.
Most of the town had been at that wedding.
Aunt Phoebeâs house was going to take some work. Two stories tall, it was a Victorian farmhouse with a wide front porch, a drawing room/living room off the entry, a music room tucked to the left, a formal dining area in the middle and a tiny kitchenâtiny by todayâs standardsâat the back, with a mudroom where the âmenfolkâ could clean up before coming in from the fields at dinner. Probably 2,400 square feet in total, it was divided into thirteen small rooms that were packed with furniture, rugs, decorations, books, lamps and magazines. The attic held objects thatâd been handed down for generations, as well as steamer trunks of old clothes, quilts and needlepointâeven a dressmakerâs dummy thatâd given Talulah a fright when she first went up to take a look because sheâd thought someone was in the attic with her.
The basement held shelf upon shelf of canned goods, a deep freezer full of meat thatâd most likely been butchered at a local ranch, which meant there would be certain cutsâlike tongue and liverâTalulah would have no idea what to do with, and stacks of old newspapers and various other flotsam Phoebe had collected throughout her long life.
Even if she started right away, itâd take a week or more to sort through everything, and the house wasnât the most comfortable place to work. The windows, while beautiful with their old-fashioned casings and heavy panes, werenât energy-efficient. There was hardly any insulation in the attic and no air-conditioning to combat the heat. Typically, summers in Coyote Canyon were quite mild, with temperatures ranging between fifty and ninety degrees, but they were in a heat wave. It was mid-August, the hottest part of the year to begin with, and they were setting records.
A bead of sweat rolled between Talulahâs breasts as she surveyed the basement. Even the coolest part of the house felt stifling. And it was only noon. She couldnât imagine how Aunt Phoebe had managed in this heat. But her aunt could handle just about anything. Sheâd had a will of iron and more grit than anyone Talulah had ever met.
âHow am I going to get through all this junkâand what am I going to do with it?â Talulah muttered, disheartened by the sheer volume of things her great-aunt had collected over the years.
Her phone vibrated in the pocket of her yoga pants. Pulling it out, she saw that her sister was calling. âHey,â she answered.
âHowâs Coyote Canyon?â Debbie asked.
âI just got in last night, but from what Iâve seen so far, it hasnât changed much.â The townâs population had stayed at about three thousand since the end of the nineteenth century, when the railroad came to town and Coyote Canyon had its big boom.
She chuckled. âIt never does. Bozeman is growing like crazy, though. I read somewhere that itâs the fastest growing town in America. You should see how much itâs changed.ââNo kidding? Whoâs moving there?â
âMostly families, I guess, but enough millennials and nature-lovers to change the whole vibe from Western to trendy.â
Only forty minutes away, Bozeman had been where their parents would take them to buy school clothes and other supplies. But sheâd had no reason to go there since sheâd left Coyote Canyon. Thanks to the stigma caused by the wedding, sheâd tried to forget the whole area. âDid you guys come for Rodeo Days this year?â The week before the Fourth of July, Coyote Canyon held seven days of celebration that included rodeos, a 10K/5K run, a Mountain Man Rendezvous, parades, tractor pulls and bake-offs. Everything culminated in the fireworks of Independence Day.
âNo. I wanted to,â Debbie said, âbut Scott was under too much pressure at work to take the time, and I didnât want to try to manage the kids on my own.â
âIâm sorry that Paul and I couldnât make it.â
âHas something changed Iâm not aware of? Are you two together now?â
Heâd been trying to get with her since she met him, especially after they started the diner. But it was only recently that sheâd gone on the pill and slept with him for the first time. âNot really. Weâve started dating. Sort of.â
âSort of?â her sister echoed.
âYou know how hard it is for me to know when I really like a guy. Anyway, howâve you been feeling? Any news on the baby?â She asked because she was interested, but she was also eager to change the subject.
âIâm fine,â Debbie said. âJust tired.â
âIt shouldnât be much longer, right?â
âIâm due in a week, and the doctor wonât let me go more than a few days over.â
âCall me as soon as labor starts. Iâll come for the birth.â Billings was only a hundred miles to the east. Part of the reason Talulah had agreed to handle her auntâs funeral and belongings was because it put her in closer proximity to Debbie. She wanted to be there for the arrival of the new addition, especially since their parents couldnât be.
âI will. I canât wait until this pregnancy is over.â She groaned. âIâm getting so uncomfortable.â
âYouâve done this three times before. Iâm sure the birth will be routine.â
Maybe not strictly routine. Debbie had developed gestational diabetes, so there was a good chance this child would have to be delivered by Caesarean section. But they were pretending thereâd be no complications. Neither of them cared to consider all the things that could go wrong.
âI feel bad that youâre having to take so much time away from the dessert diner,â she said. âMaybe I should drive over for the funeral, at least, and help while I can.â
âDonât you dare!â Talulah said. âI donât want you going into labor while youâre here. Your husband, your doctor, everyone and everything you need are there.â
âBut Iâm just sitting around with my swollen ankles while you deal with everything in that musty house.â
Musty, sweltering house. But Talulah didnât want to make Debbie feel any guiltier. Besides, her sister wasnât just sitting around. She was watching her other kids. Talulah could hear them, and the TV, in the background and knew that Debbie would have to bring her young nieces and nephew if she came here. Having them underfoot would only make it harder to get anything done. âThe church is stepping in to organize the funeral. You set that up yourself. So you have been involved. Besides, much to our parentsâ dismay, youâre the only one giving them grandkids. This is the least I can do for Mom and Dad.â
Debbie laughed. âHave you heard from them?â
âThey called last night to make sure I got in okay.â
âHow long did the drive take you?â
âTen hours.â
âUgh!â
âIt wasnât a big deal. I couldnât flyâI knew Iâd need a car while I was here.â Sheâd made the trip to Reno several times since her family moved from Coyote Canyon, so she was used to driving even farther. Theyâd only visited Seattle once, but Talulah had been so busy with college, then culinary school, then working in various restaurants before launching Talulahâs Dessert Diner with Paul, whom sheâd met along the way, that she didnât mind.
âIâm surprised they arenât coming home for the funeral,â Debbie mused.
Not to mention the birth of their latest grandchild. Talulah thought she could hear the disappointment in her sisterâs voice, but Debbie would never complain, especially to a defector like Talulah. Debbie remained as committed to their parentsâ faith as they did. âIâm not surprised,â Talulah said. âAfrica is so far away, and theyâd only have to turn around and go right back. They want to remain focused on their mission, at least until theyâre officially released.â
âAunt Phoebe was so prickly, she and Mom were never very close, anyway,â Debbie added.
That wasnât strictly true. Phoebe used to have them over for dinner every Sunday, and Carolyn brought Talulah and Debbie over for piano lessons. It was only later that they had a bit of a falling-out and quit talking. Despite that, Talulah guessed their mother felt conflicted about missing her auntâs funeral. She also understood that Carolyn wasnât going to change her mind. Choosing her mission over her family was almost a matter of pride; it showcased the level of her belief. âWhen we visited Aunt Phoebe, and we werenât there for piano lessons, we had to sit on chairs in the cramped dining room or living room, and sheâd snap at us to quit wiggling, remember?â
âThat was if sheâd let us in the house at all,â Debbie said drily. âShe used to tell us to go out front and play.â
âWith no toys.â
âShe was the sternest person Iâve ever met.â
âShe also never threw anything away.â
âShe was a hoarder?â
âKind of. She somehow managed to be fastidious and clean at the same time, so itâs not the type of hoarding you imagine when you hear the word, but itâs so cluttered in here I can barely move from room to room.â
âIf itâs that bad, I should come over, after all.â
Talulah blew a wisp of hair thatâd fallen from the clip on top of her head away from her mouth. âNo, Iâve got it. Really.â There was no way Debbie would survive the heat, not in her condition.
âBut you must be feeling some pressure to get back to Seattle,â Debbie said. âYou told me you have a line of people every night trying to get into the diner.â
âWe do, but Paulâs there.â She couldnât have taken off for a whole month in any prior year. In the beginning, their business had required too much time, energy and focusâfrom both of them. Sheâd come up with the concept and had the name, the website, the logo, the location and the recipes figured out when Paul decided to come on board to help with the capital, credit and muscle required to get the rest of the way. Itâd been touch and go for a while, but the place was running smoothly now, following a familiar routine. They had employees they could trust, and with her partner managing the day-to-day details, she wasnât too worried.
âHe doesnât resent you being gone so long?â Debbie asked.
âHe has a family reunion in Iowa at the end of September. Then heâll be hiking in Europe for three weeks with a couple of friends. So Iâll be returning the favor soon enough.â
âHe gets to go to Europe while you have to spend your vacation in Coyote Canyon, attending a funeral and cleaning out a house that was built in the 1800s?â
Talulah didnât mind the work. It was facing the past and all the people she hadnât seen or heard from in years that would be difficult. âItâs not a big deal,â she insisted.
âOkay.â There was a slight pause. Then her sister said, âI hate to bring up a sensitive subject, butâŠwhat are you going to do when you see Charlie?â
âI donât know.â She certainly wasnât looking forward to it.
âItâd be a lot easier if he was married.â
Talulah agreed. If he had a wife, heâd be able to believe sheâd saved him for the woman he was really supposed to marry. His family and friends would then be more likely to forgive her, too. But according to Jane, he wasnât even seeing anyone, so she had no idea how heâd feel toward her. âI ran into Brant,â she volunteered, simply because she knew her sister would be interested.
âHowâd he look?â
Too good for the emotional well-being of the women around him. But such an admission would never pass Talulahâs lips. She preferred not to acknowledge his incredible good looks. âHavenât you seen him fairly recently?â She knew her sister came back to Coyote Canyon occasionally.
âFour or five years ago.â
âHe probably hasnât changed much since then.â
âHe married?â
âNo.â
âSomehow that doesnât surprise me. I doubt heâll ever settle down. Whatâd he say when he saw you?â
âJust gave me a hard time about Charlie.â
âWhen I was in high school, I was so disappointed I couldnât get his attention. Now Iâm glad he had no interest in me. He would only have broken my heart.â
âProbably,â Talulah agreed. But, truth be told, she felt sort of bad talking about Brant that way. It was a case of âthe pot calling the kettle black,â as her aunt wouldâve said. Sheâd broken her share of hearts, too, and possibly in worse ways, as heâd intimated. But she couldnât seem to settle down. No matter how hard she tried to force the issue and be more like her sisterâto do what her parents expected of herâshe wound up having such terrible anxiety attacks she literally had to flee. Maybe Brant had the same problem when it came to making a lifelong commitment. Maybe he was just better at accepting his limitations.The doorbell rang as her sister finished telling her about little Casey, her three-year-old niece, whoâd gotten hold of a pair of scissors and cut her bangs off at the scalp. âThatâs probably the woman from the church now,â Talulah said. âI need to go over the funeral with her. Iâll call you later, okay?â
Her sister said goodbye, and Talulah disconnected as she hurried up the narrow, creaking stairs. There was a woman standing on the stoop, all right. But before she pushed open the screen doorâthe regular door was already standing open because sheâd been trying to catch even the slightest breezeâTalulah could see enough to know it wasnât anyone from the church.This woman had a cigarette in one hand and a bottle of wine in the other.
Tahlulahâs Back in Town
Author: Brenda Novak
ISBN: 9780778386179
Publication Date: August 22, 2023
Publisher: MIRA
Book Description:
Talulah Barclay returns to Coyote fourteen years after leaving her fiance at the alter. Sheâs back to sell her deceased auntâs home and head back to Seattle as quickly as possible since the memories in a small town are long and no one has forgiven her for running off. And when she finds herself falling for the best friend of her jilted ex she knows life is going to get more difficult. And when sheâs injured by shattered glass after someone throws a rock through her window she knows she is not welcome in town. But she still has close friends there and they rally around her and she finds herself willing to open her heart to the town and to the man she truly loves.
Author Bio:
New York Times bestselling author Brenda Novak has written over 60 novels. An eight-time Rita nominee, she’s won The National Reader’s Choice, The Bookseller’s Best and other awards. She runs Brenda Novak for the Cure, a charity that has raised more than $2.5 million for diabetes research (her youngest son has this disease). She considers herself lucky to be a mother of five and married to the love of her life. Visit Brenda at www.brendanovak.com.
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