
Part of Series
Hallie Donovan was a gypsy angel, a rodeo queen with a heart as big as Texas, and no woman was more delectable—or lethal—to Josh Butler! He'd seen what havoc bewitching women could wreak in a man's life, but Hallie was danger worth courting...and he thought himself just heartless enough to take what she offered—especially when she promised she wasn't the falling-in-love kind. When Josh raked her with his sexy golden eyes and took her captive on a carpet of flowers, Hallie felt a miraculous joy bubble up from deep inside, but would the price of becoming his magnificent obession be betrayal? She drew him to her in rituals as old as time, welcoming him as the rain nourishes the earth, but she insisted that lvoers couldn't have boundaries, and still he wouldn't erase his pain by sharing it with her. Josh believed that love disappeared at the first sign of trouble. Could she prove she'd never leave while his heart wore her brand?
Author

Peggy Webb is a USA Today Bestselling author from Mississippi. She has written 70 novels, 200 magazine humor columns, 2 screenplays. Called a "comedic genius" by her peers, she writes romantic comedy and the hilarious Southern Cousins Mysteries as Peggy Webb. She writes literary fiction under the pen names Anna Michaels and Elaine Hussey. Pat Conroy calls her literary work "astonishing" and Kathie Fong Yoneda labels it "brilliant." The author calls The Sweetest Hallelujah,written as Elaine Hussey, "the best book I've ever written." Advance reveiwers say "if you can buy only one book, make it The Sweetest Hallelujah." Learn more at www.elainehussey.com. An actress and musician as well as a writer, Peggy composed the blues lyrics that appear throughout The Sweetest Hallelujah. She has been in many stage plays at her local community theater and says the role she enjoyed most was the Witch in "The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe." "I was playing against type," she says. :) Peggy loves gardening, playing piano, singing in her church choir, hanging out on her front porch with friends and owning dogs "who think they are the boss." She considers her greastest accomplishment "raising two wonderful children who are good people, good citizens and good parents." She says, "I adore my four grandchildren who call me Gigi. Thank goodness, the feeling is mutual." Series: * Westmoreland Diaries * A Southern Cousins Mystery