Frigid (Frigid, #1)


Some Rules Are Made To Be Broken… But Breaking The Ultimate Rule Can Change Everything.





JENNA OLIVER DOESN’T HAVE TIME TO GET INVOLVED WITH ONE BOY, LET ALONE TWO.

All Jenna wants is to escape her evaporating small town and her alcoholic mother. She’s determined she’ll go to college and find a life that is wholly hers—one that isn’t tainted by her family’s past. But when the McAli-ster twins move to town and Jenna gets involved with both of them, she learns the life she planned may not be the one she gets.

IAN MCALISTER DOESN’T WANT TO START OVER; HE WANTS TO REMEMBER.

Ian can’t recall a single thing from the last three months—and he seems to be losing more memories every day. His family knows the truth, but no one will tell him what really happened before he lost his memory. When he meets Jenna, Ian believes that he can be normal again because she makes not remembering something he can handle.

THE SECRET IAN CAN’T REMEMBER IS

THE ONE LUKE MCALISTER CAN’T FORGET.

Luke has always lived in the shadow of his twin brother until Jenna stumbles into his life. She sees past who he’s supposed to be, and her kiss brings back the spark that life stole. Even though Luke feels like his brother deserves her more, Luke can’t resist Jenna—which is the trigger that makes Ian’s memory return.

JENNA, IAN, AND LUKE ARE ABOUT TO LEARN

THERE ARE ONLY SO MANY SECRETS YOU CAN KEEP

BEFORE THE TRUTH COMES TO RECLAIM YOU.





Acknowledgments

I wasn’t planning on writing this book until Patricia Riley asked me to write something for the Spencer Hill Contemporary line. So a huge thank you to you for asking me, therefore having a lot to do with the creation of Kyler and Syd. Thank you to Kate Kaynak and the wonderful team at Spencer Hill for their editorial skills and always supporting me no matter what. Thank you to Stacey Morgan for willingly subjecting herself to my first drafts. No one would can truly understand how painful that is until you’ve seen one of my first drafts.

Thank you to my friends and family for putting up with me. I’m always writing it seems, which is something I love to do, but leaves little time for them. They are owed major props for allowing me to dedicate my time to fictional characters.

And to all the readers out there—I write because it’s what I love to do, but it is because of each and every one of you that enables me to do this. There are not enough ways I could possibly thank you guys.