Desert rain

Elizabeth Lowell, 1944-

Book - 1996

Saved in:
Subjects
Published
New York : Avon Books 1996.
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Lowell, 1944- (-)
Item Description
"Desert rain was previously published in an altered form entitled Summer Thunder by Silhouette Books in 1983."
Physical Description
409 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9780380767625
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

By revising and padding her first contemporary romance, Lowell (Autumn Lover) has created a new full-length novel. Holly Shannon North is a tomboy turned fashion model who meets up with former flame, Linc McKenzie, during a photo shoot near Palm Springs. She realizes that Linc loves "Holly," the girl she was at 16, but has no interest in "Shannon," the sophisticated cover girl she has become. Holly tries to convince Linc, who seems to believe otherwise, that beauty does not equal evil. The love scenes are trademark Lowell: dynamic, sensual and thoroughly satisfying, but the book's premise is so weak and the characters so flat they can't sustain the added (in fact, doubled) verbiage. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Desert Rain Chapter One "Come on, Shannon, smile like I'm your lover. You do know what a lover is, don't you, sweetie?" Holly Shannon North bit back what she wanted to say and smiled as she had been trained to do. Jerry was the hottest fashion photographer outside of Paris, but he had a mouth like a razor blade. Since Holly had refused to sleep with him, he had become nearly impossible to work with. The flash that burst in Holly's face was reflected in flexible metal shields held by sweating technicians. "Better, but not good enough," Jerry said. "I know you're ice from the neck down, but let's keep it our secret, lovey." Holly lowered her eyelids until her unusual sherry-colored eyes were only glints beneath thick black lashes. Long hair fell like black water over her bare shoulders and upper arms. Her smile widened without becoming a bit softer. Jerry grunted. Motionless, Holly waited. Perspiration made fine tendrils of hair curl over the high temples and slanted cheekbones that had transformed a young girl called Holly North into Shannon, an internationally famous model. "Now give me a pout," Jerry ordered. "Lots of lip just begging to be bitten." Holly pouted. "Turn left," Jerry said harshly. "Make that hair fly. Make every man who looks at you want to feel it sliding over his naked skin." Holly turned with the grace that was as much a part of her as her long legs and lithe body. The heat that had everyone else shorttempered and sweating was like wine to her. She had been raised in Palm Springs' scorching, brilliant, endless summers. The desert sun that bleached out most people made her bloom. A delicate rose flush glowed beneath her skin, hinting at the heat within, a heat that only one man had ever touched. Lincoln McKenzie. Don't think about him, Holly told herself automatically. It only hurts you. Though she tried not to think of Linc, she couldn't help herself. The feel of Palm Springs in the summer was too unique. She couldn't make herself believe that she was in New York or Paris, Hong Kong or London or Rome, and Lincoln McKenzie was half a world away. Holly knew that Linc lived here, near enough to touch. He was part of the desert, as strong as the mountains rising in stark grandeur beyond the city. Memories of Linc, like the sun, fired her skin. She had worshipped Linc since she was nine years old and he was seventeen, riding one of the Arabian horses his family raised. The first time she saw him was a moment so vivid Holly could still smell the sage and dust, see Linc's slow smile and hazel eyes, feel the velvet flutter of the horse's nostrils and her own heart as she stood in the path of his mount and smiled up at him. "Lovely!" Jerry said. "Keep it up! Over the shoulder now. Turn. Faster! Again. Again! Again!" Feeling like a leaf caught in the winds of time, Holly turned and spun, giving herself to the desert heat and her memories of one man. She couldn't mark the day or even the month when her young girl's crush on Linc had changed into something deeper, hotter, more consuming. Although their ranches shared a common boundary, the two families did not socialize. Yet as Holly grew older, she saw Linc frequently at horse shows and auctions and training rings. With each meeting she fell more completely under his spell. Each time, it crushed her that Linc didn't notice her. "Yeah, good," Jerry muttered. "Now a little brighter, less pout. Big smile, baby. Gimme teeth." Holly smiled at the camera, but her eyes were focused on the past. On her sixteenth birthday she had been baby-sitting Beth McKenzie, Linc's half-sister, who was only nine. The McKenzies came home very late, arguing and more than a little drunk. Holly had never heard people swear at each other like that. When Linc showed up unexpectedly, Holly ran to him. He drove her home, talking softly to her until she stopped shaking. When he learned that she had turned sixteen at midnight, he teased her gently about "sweet sixteen and never been kissed." What began as a comforting gesture became different, deeper, the timeless kiss of a man holding a woman he desired. Holly responded with an innocent abandon that had all but destroyed Linc's control. After a long time he had taken her face between his hands and looked at her, memorizing the moment and the moonlight pouring over her dazed face. The smile she gave him had been that of Eve newly awakened to the possibilities of being a woman. "That's the smile I want!" said Jerry triumphantly. "My God, babe, if you were only half as hot as you look. Left shoulder. Gimme some heat. Yeah. Yeah! Turn on for me, babe!" Holly barely noticed the photographer's chatter or the battery of flashes going off around her. She was sixteen again, smiling up at the man she had always loved. Linc had wanted to take her out the following night, but Holly had promised to baby-sit for her father's foreman. That was where she had been when Linc came and told her there had been an accident, a head-on crash along a twisting county road. He had driven Holly to the hospital where doctors were trying to save her parents. He had held her through the long night while first her mother and then her father died. Linc had held Holly while she screamed and wept, held her while her world shattered, held her until she fell into an exhausted sleep in his arms. When Holly woke up, she was in a hospital bed and her mother's sister, Sandra, was there. Holly knew her aunt only from a few faded photographs in a shoebox . . . Desert Rain . Copyright © by Elizabeth Lowell. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Desert Rain by Elizabeth Lowell All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.