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Mark: Bearly Saints, Book 2

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Addison Adelaide-Spencer has always had a natural talent for songwriting. She find herself humming a tune, then running around the house like a chicken with its head cut off looking for a pen and scrap of paper. Receipts, index cards, and magazines: nothing was safe from her scribbles. But these were songs she wrote for herself, not for anyone else. So when her Grandma sent her song to the Konstantine Talent Agency without her knowledge, Addison flipped her lid. Would these strangers even accept her, given her family secret?

Mark Saint knows talent when he sees it. His grandfather used to say “There ain’t no fakin’ talent.” On stage he plays the same bass fiddle his grandfather did and is always looking for the best songs for him and his brothers to record. So he drove across the state to the dilapidated house in the middle of nowhere to meet the woman who wrote this special song. When he first laid eyes on her, he knew she’d be his mate.

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3 thoughts on “Mark: Bearly Saints, Book 2

  1. The title was 4% of the download. I don’t care for Kindle Unlimited word dumps and didn’t read the remainder. A little folksy language goes a long way; such as bein’, darlin’, iffen, weddin”…

  2. Love Mark Saint and Addy’s story Addy and Mark are a lovely, sweet shape shifter couple with music in their souls. This is a short story, not a novel, but is a great read none the less. She overcomes her severe fear of the outside world to get a life and light on the music she writes. She gets the best help possible with Mark and his family, who are also from the country near Addy’s. I enjoyed the country slang in their speech, which made the story come to life for me. 

  3. A shift in perspective. A were lioness trying to control her shifting, living along with her grandmother, a were bear sent out to try and convince a song writer/singer to sell his group the writes to a song her grandmother sent to them, read to find yourself in another world.

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