Book 5
By: Casey Swan

A Longing of the Heart

Casey Swan
 A KAURI BAY ROMANCE   Book Five

Dawn has found her ideal vocation as a diesel mechanic at Dave’s Garage in Kauri Bay. There’s a shortage of men in the little seaside town – which is so frustrating for her and her sister Skye – but she has no intention of leaving her town for love.

When Matt, a home town boy who made it big in Canada, comes back to see how the town is faring sparks fly, but they’re the wrong sort. His opening comment ‘well, hellooo legs’ is absolutely unacceptable, and when he asks Dawn out to dinner she tells him bluntly she has no intention of having her heart broken when he moves on to his next big adventure.

Still, Matt perseveres. At first it’s just to get her to accept a dinner date as an apology, and then he wants more. But she won’t consider him if he’s going to leave Kauri Bay, which he must admit is a reasonable precaution on her part. So what can he do about the situation?

Report content
Categories: , ,

More in this series.

more books by this author.

Hello, wherever you are in the world.

I live in an area of New Zealand called Taranaki, which is built around a huge mountain rising from the middle of a flat plain. Mount Taranaki (2518m) looks a lot like Mount Fuji, and is another almost perfect volcanic cone. I climbed it first when I was thirteen, and I've spent a lot of time on it ever since. We say we live 'under the mountain' if we live in Taranaki.

I had some trouble finding a new pen name for the Kauri Bay romance series. I had already used Eric Thorpe for my popular military thrillers, and another name for my recent science-fiction trilogy, so what to do next? In the end I took the first name from one grandfather and the last name from the other, and tweaked two letters to make the name flow. That's how the name Casey Swan was born. I’m aiming at six books in the Kauri Bay series, and we'll see what happens after that.

As I mentioned in the Author's Note to the first Kauri Bay book (A Bridge Between Hearts), physio yoga over fifty does exist, and I teach it. I have essentially invented this branch of yoga myself, with a lot of help from other yoga teachers, a physio friend and now a chiropractor friend. I did once try to put a few hour-long classes up at YouTube so everyone could benefit, but the cost was too high and there was a large digital hurdle to overcome. I understand something like this is underway in Europe, which is good to hear.

May the books you read inspire your life!

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “A Longing of the Heart”