Blog Tour, Review, The Wilde One & Wilde Riders by Savannah Young



Synopsis

Wilde Riders


FOUR WILDE BROTHERS…ONE WILDE COUNTRY BAND 

WILDE RIDERS is the first novel in a spicy new contemporary romance series about four sexy brothers, their small-town bar and their local country band. WILDE RIDERS can be read as a STAND ALONE NOVEL or as part of the SERIES. 

Cooper Wilde spent his entire adolescence counting the days until he could escape rural northwest New Jersey. Now at 26, he can’t believe he’s coming back. But his late father’s bar, Haymakers, is in financial trouble and his older brother, Jake, has asked for Cooper’s help. 

Riley Smith, 25, is fresh out of her Ivy League MBA program and wants to make an impression on her employer, H & C Bank. Her first solo assignment is a fraud investigation on a business loan they made to Haymakers. 

Even though Old Town is less than 90 minutes from New York City, Riley feels like she’s stepped into another world in this remote, one-bar town. Riley can’t wait to do her business and get back to the city as quickly as her sports car will take her…until she meets Cooper Wilde. He’s not like the other guys in this rural town and Riley feels inexplicably attracted to him.
 

 

Desiree's 5 Star Review 

Wilde Riders is a sweet love story that takes place in small-town New Jersey.
For the past couple years, Cooper Wilde has been on a determined path to success. He left his country boy lifestyle when he left home, until he gets a call for help from his brother. These brothers are dysfunctional little lot. Cooper really doesn’t want to be here but he knows his brother wouldn’t have asked him for help if he really didn’t need it.
So here he is back in “hick town” and in the family run bar. Then Riley Smith walks in and sparks his interest. She looks completely out of place in her high fashion suit and heels, but so does he.
Riley Smith is dumped in rural New Jersey to investigate a little bar for financial fraud. She couldn’t be less pleased about where she is and she is ready to clear up this mess and get back to New York.
After Cooper and Riley meet and instantly find sparks, they head into what they believe will a short fling.

This is a quick and fast paced love story. It’s sweet and homey and will pull you in. Check out Riley and Cooper’s story for yourself in the first book in the Old Town Country Romance series!  
 


The Wilde One


FOUR WILDE BROTHERS...ONE WILDE COUNTRY BAND 

Tucker Wilde joined the United States Army right out of high school and was injured in Iraq. But more than just his leg was shattered in the Middle East. The war also crushed his spirit and damaged his soul. When a strange couple arrives at his family’s bar, Haymakers, Tucker can see signs of mental and emotional abuse and is immediately drawn to the lovely but fragile girl seated at his bar. 

Gracie Parker has been a victim of abuse her entire life. When her boyfriend, Dex, beats her in the parking lot of Haymakers and abandons her, it’s almost too much for the nineteen-year-old to bear. That is until Tucker appears like a warrior knight from the darkness to save her. 

Tucker and Gracie are two broken people who are immediately drawn together. But their relationship and even their very lives are threatened by Dex who will stop at nothing to get Gracie back. 

If you like your trucks loud, your beer cold and your men hot...you'll love THE WILDE ONE. 




Desiree's 5 Star Review


In the first book of the Old Town Country Romance series, we read about Cooper Wilde and his adventure. This time we get to know more about Cooper's brother Tucker. 

Tucker is a wounded veteran, in more ways than one. What he went through in Iraq has effected his physical, mental, emotional, and social life. He doesn't think he will ever fit in or feel comfortable with anyone, including his family again. So he continues on the best way he can, working and and keeping to himself. He knows his family worries about him but he can't pull himself out of his funk long enough to try to make them feel better.

Gracie Parker got the crappy end of the stick when it comes to life. With a horrible set of parents and no one to help her in life, she's landed in an even worse predicament as a young women. So as she finds herself with the current monster in her life, in a small town bar, she doesn't know what is in store for her next. When a handsome bartender with damage in his eyes tries to be nice to her, she becomes terrified. She knows her monster won't tolerate it. So she isn't so much as surprised as she is frightened of being beat up and left in a town where she doesn't know anyone and with nowhere to go.

Tucker doesn't know why Gracie makes him feel so protective and compassionate towards her, he's just glad to feel something at all. When he finds out about Gracie's past he has to make a decision about whether or not he can handle what it does to him. Gracie has to make her own decisions and find out if she can overcome feeling as though her past and the monsters of her life own her. Can Gracie and Tucker find what they need and so desperately want with one another? Or have they been to beaten down by life to have any hope for themselves? Find out when you keep up with the Old Town Country boys! 

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Excerpt

Wilde Riders Excerpt:

The drive into New Jersey is exhausting. My only saving grace is that most of the traffic is going into the city instead of out of the city like I am. You’ve got to love those bridge and tunnel guys. I wouldn’t date one but I have a little bit of respect for them. The commute into Manhattan turns a nine hour work day into an eleven hour one, if you’re lucky.

I can feel my stomach start to knot as I get further away from the city and further away from civilization. Pretty soon I’ll be in the sticks surrounded by woods and farmland. I can almost smell the manure that will no doubt take days to completely rid from my nasal passages. I pray that I don’t run into any animals, especially cows, which are huge, smelly and completely freak me out. The only live animals I ever care to see have to fit comfortably in a handbag, like a Chihuahua or Teacup Poodle, for example. 

I have an appointment with a man named Jake Wilde. He asked me to come early, before the place opened at noon, so he could give me his full attention. I try to imagine what someone named Jake Wilde would look like and all I can come up with is an old gunslinger like Clint Eastwood in Unforgiven. 

As I pull into Old Town the place looks exactly like I thought it would. The buildings in the town square are old and I image the place hasn’t changed much in the last hundred years or so. 

Haymakers is just past the town square, down the hill from the deli, next to the gas station. Those were the exact directions I was given, in those words. I take that to mean the town only has one gas station and one deli. 

When I pull into the parking lot, there’s only one other vehicle sitting there. It’s an old beat-up Dodge Ram. Nothing like fitting the country bumpkin stereotype like a glove. Then I have a brief moment of panic and wonder if it’s safe to park my BMW in the dirt lot. Then I remind myself where I am. Who is going to mess with it in the middle of the day? A stray deer from the woods out back? The only thing I probably have to worry about is it getting dusty.

I take in a deep breath. I have to be thankful there’s no manure smell yet. The quicker you do this, I remind myself, the quicker you can get back to the lovely asphalt jungle you call home.

I’m hit with a gust of wind as soon as I get out of my car. How is it possible that Old Town is even windier than lower Manhattan? I didn’t think I’d ever find a place windier than Wall Street. Even the Windy City didn’t seem this windy when I had business in Chicago. 

When I enter the bar, I try to smooth down my thick hair, which I know is probably a complete mess from the gust. I’m surprised by the homey feel of the place. How could someone like me possibly feel at home in a country bar? Even if I was wearing jeans and cowboy boots, if I even owned jeans and cowboy boots, I wouldn’t fit in at a place like this. 

I hear someone clear his throat and I turn to see a guy about my age, mid-twenties, standing next to me. I can’t help my surprise when I see he’s wearing khakis and a polo shirt, like he just stepped off a golf course. He looks as out of place in this country bar as I feel. 

“Are you Jake Wilde?” I ask.

The guy gives me the faintest hint of a smile but it’s almost as if it pains him to give that much. His deep brown eyes look even more distressed and I can’t help but wonder what’s behind those sad eyes.

He rakes his fingers through his thick dark hair. “A little windy out, isn’t it?”

My hand automatically goes to my hair and I try to casually flatten it down again. I imagine I must look like I just stepped out of a wind tunnel. 

“Your hair looks fine,” the guy tries to assure me. But he’s got that hint of a smile on his face again and it makes me wonder if he’s lying just to make me feel better. 

“I’m Cooper Wilde,” the guy says as he offers a hand. 

I don’t know why I suddenly feel nervous about shaking it. It’s a business meeting. That’s what people do. But the way this guy is looking at me gives me the feeling that he might be interested in more than just business.

But I’m not, I remind myself. Not only because I’ve all but sworn off men, I’m here to do a job. I’ve been working for H & C Bank for two years and this is my first solo assignment as a lead investigator. If I continue to do well, I’ll be well on my way to becoming a Vice President before I turn thirty. I don’t need a man to throw me off my career trajectory. And definitely not some guy in a country bar in rural New Jersey.



The Wilde One Excerpt:

One 

Tucker 

“You look different,” Savage says, then downs the last of his pint of ale. 

“Different how?” I prod even though I have an idea what he’s going to say. I look more normal. Like I fit into society rather than looking like an outcast. 

Savage shrugs. He’s never been a person of many words. We’re like two peas in a pod that way. Even though he rarely says very much, with just one sideways glance Savage can have the biggest and meanest guys on the planet shaking in their cowboy boots. 

People say that about me too. 

“Do you want another?” I ask, even though I can guess his response. Savage always orders two pints and drinks them at the far corner of the bar. There are worse ways of coping with the past than drinking a few beers every night before he goes home to an empty apartment. I should know. I’m a master of poor coping skills. 

“Hit me,” Savage says. 

I pour him another pint and take away the empty. 

“You look good.” 

I’m surprised by the compliment. I’d never use the word good to describe anything about me. But I do look better than I have since I got back from Iraq. 

“Drink your beer,” I tell him because I’m not in the mood to explain what’s been going on in my life. 

Savage was in Iraq about the same time I was and he’s the closest thing I’ve got to a friend. I’m not one for relationships. Life is too short and relationships are too painful. When you get close to someone, you usually just end up getting hurt. 

But like me, Savage isn’t the type of guy who gets too close to people. The most obvious reason is the way he looks: he’s big and scary. Also just like me. 

Savage and I lift weights together, and in a fight it would be a close match. Not that either of us would ever start a fight but we would definitely end one if we had to. 

It’s a weeknight and the bar is almost deserted except for a few of the regulars. That’s why I’m surprised when I see a couple I don’t recognize walk in and look around. The guy’s wearing all leather and carrying two helmets, so he’s obviously a biker. He looks about my height, six feet two inches and he’s big. The girl looks tiny standing next to him. She’s the definition of the word waif. She looks like a strong wind could pick her up and blow her away. Not a good thing in Old Town where it’s windy most of the time. 

The most interesting thing about her, though, is her coloring. I’ve never seen someone so fair in my life. I’m the only blond in my family but I’m not even close to this girl. Her long hair is so light it’s practically white. And her skin is the color of milk. She looks like a princess who just stepped out of a fairytale, as corny as that sounds. 

I can’t help but notice that she doesn’t look like she wants to be here. Or maybe she doesn’t want to be with the guy. It’s hard to tell. But she doesn’t look happy. If anything, she looks scared. 

As the couple steps closer to the bar, I can see the girl is shaking. I’m not sure whether she’s shaking because she’s scared, or because it’s January and it’s freezing outside and she’s wearing a tiny spring jacket that barely fits. It almost looks like a jacket for a kid it’s so small on her. Not that she’s much bigger than a kid herself. 

What kind of a jerk wears a thick leather jacket while he lets his girl freeze? I’m really not liking this guy at all. And when I see him grab her by the elbow, so roughly she almost comes off the floor, I can feel every hair on my body stand at attention. 

Is it possible to hate a guy I don’t even know? 



MeetTheAuthor




Romance novelist Savannah Young grew up in rural northwest New Jersey in a place very similar to the fictional Old Town, which is featured in her books. When she's not at her computer creating spicy stories, Savannah is traveling to exotic locales or spending time with her husband and their bloodhounds.





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1 comment:

karenmbryson said...

Thank you so much for hosting me on your website today. I appreciate it so much!
Savannah Young