

Books in series

#1
The Gentleman
2024
Cameron Fairway has a secret.
Before he shares it with the world, he’s determined to build the confidence he wants to live life as a gay man and the experience he’ll need to snag Mr. Right. For that, he requires a mentor—someone experienced. Someone with manners. Someone discreet enough to be able to mix business with pleasure under the watchful eye of his father’s empire—a gentleman. Pete Carver is without a doubt that man.
Pete Carver has a problem.
Pete doesn’t mix business with pleasure because there is no pleasure in business. There’s only order and discipline if you want to succeed. When the boss’ youngest son approaches him with a proposition that rattles every one of his sensibilities, Pete is determined to get to the bottom of the ploy. Because that’s all it can possibly be—why else would the ruthless John Fairway’s son proposition a straight man in his father’s company? The apple can’t fall far from the tree.
\\awakening, workplace, mistaken identity, obsessive compulsive disorder, touch starved, praise, possessive, homophobic/racist father, family rejection, slow burn, hurt/comfort

#2
The Idiot
2024
You can't pick who you love...nor can you run from them.
Murphy Malone loves his orchard, his mother, and his dog. Life is great until he can't stop thinking about what he's missing—someone to share it all with. When he realizes that his love for his best friend, Jesse Carver, runs deeper than the bonds of friendship, it just makes things worse. The problem—Jesse Carver is the straightest man he's ever known.
Only time and distance can ease the ache, but what do you do when your loyal best friend follows you to the gay singles cruise you fled to in an attempt to escape your feelings?
Tropes: idiots in love, awakening, friends to lovers, forced proximity, grumpy/sunshine
A follow on to The Gentleman with some spoilers to The Gentleman, but reads as a standalone
Author

Dianna Roman
Author · 11 books
Romcom author, Dianna Roman, believes in laughter, happily-ever-afters, unsung heroes and heroines, internal struggles, chocolate, coffee, fluffiness, talking to yourself, hard work, and above all, love. She enjoys writing stories set in small and rural towns and about characters who don't have this thing called life quite figured out yet. Her favorite writing challenge is tackling the miscommunication trope by making it entertaining. Dianna lives with her husband and daughter in the woods where sunsets and gardening are the reason her house may be a bit messy.