
Travel back in time to Ancient Sumer, to the town of Kushuk, where a new and unexpected arrival at the Temple of the Sun God sets tongues wagging. He's actually Dr. Kyle Pendrake - a scientist with a rather unpredictable piece of equipment... When writer Annie Lynden gets caught in its toils, she finds herself beneath the Sumerian sun and in the arms of the Sun God's representative... Will passion born in the heat of the past survive the trip back to the present? Will Kyle and Annie make it as Sumerians? What did the first beer taste like, anyway? Nerin of Kushuk isn't terribly interested in Gods or Priests. He's more concerned with the woman he's found on his riverbank. She's strangely appealing even though she's got a slave brand on her ankle. And a very strange necklace clasped in her hand. Nerin isn't one to love a woman, just take her and leave her sated with pleasure. Now he's run across someone who might require a whole lot more... Two connected stories set in the wild and wonderful world that was Ancient Sumer. Come celebrate the Gods, Goddesses and a heck of a lot of fertility rituals. Bring your own beer....
Author

I'm really rather boring... Honestly. I live a pretty hum-drum life as a wife and mother. I shop at the local supermarket and use coupons now and again. See? Boring stuff. I live in Virginia now, so I am learning all kinds of new things - such as being able to buy beer and wine along with bread and toothpaste. Wow! Having been born and raised in England, I do possess a well-developed feel for the English countryside. Comes in handy for those Regency tales. Even though I was transplanted over to the US side of the Atlantic, I still have ties to all things Brit. I bake sausage rolls and make Christmas pudding. You can take the girl out of England, but not England out of the girl, I guess. I'm not sure anyone can write really well unless they read. A lot. I read anything and everything these days. And mostly on my couch with a book on my knees. Yes, the technology is out there for electronic versions, but there's not much to compare with a shiny new hardcover from a favorite author.