Dancing on a Moonbeam
By Kathia
- Release Date: 2016-06-13
- Genre: Contemporary Romance
Description
“A sweet, small town romance riddled with a cast of likeable, endearing, and memorable characters that had me glued to the pages all day. I ate this one up.” — Book Haven Book Blog
Part One:
Eleanor Westwood-Fehr gave up being a prima ballerina for dreams of love. Big mistake—one she won't make again.
Determined, she won't let anything stop her from opening a dance studio. Not her doubts. Not her teenage daughter. And certainly not her new mysterious neighbor, no matter how enticing he might be…
Part Two:
Eleanor Westwood strikes a deal with her neighbor: if Max withdraws the complaint that stopped renovation on her dance studio, she'll help him with his movie score.
Being a muse shouldn't be hard, right? For Eleanor there's too much at stake to fail. She just never realized that rousing Max's imagination means rousing his passion too—for the music, and for Eleanor herself.
Part Three:
Eleanor Westwood and her neighbor Max have a deal to help each other—one they sealed with more than a kiss.
Which is a problem, because what was supposed to be a simple deal becomes so much more as Eleanor lets Max dance his way into her heart. It should be win-win, except Eleanor isn't sure she can ever be triumphant in love...
Reviews
Dancing on a Moonbeam
4By Tiggy/CookieFirst time reading this author. I enjoyed this sweet love story, that had just the right amount of spice.Part dumb
1By straighttalker198The whole idea of the book was so freaking dumb. Who breaks a single book into 4 parts? It’s not even 4 different plots just 1 story. The composition made no sense!Good title
5By none open to useNever disappoints me as a writer. Fun, heart achy, romantic and sexy. Everything you need in a good book.Beautiful
5By AliCap89I was instantly captivated by the characters of this lovely story. The words of the author were so realistic that I could envision the settings and characters, almost like a play. I read this book in only a few hours, that’s how much I loved it.