Signed You Feel Like Home
BOOK TWO in the Bryant Family Series!
Be whisked away by this delightful second installment of the Bryant Family Series, featuring two childhood best friends—an aspiring pastry chef, and a self-made architect—as they discover their own journey to falling in love.
BOOK TWO in the Bryant Family Series!
Be whisked away by this delightful second installment of the Bryant Family Series, featuring two childhood best friends—an aspiring pastry chef, and a self-made architect—as they discover their own journey to falling in love.
BOOK TWO in the Bryant Family Series!
Be whisked away by this delightful second installment of the Bryant Family Series, featuring two childhood best friends—an aspiring pastry chef, and a self-made architect—as they discover their own journey to falling in love.
Aspiring pastry chef Jessica Johnson is six months away from graduating from Le Cordon Bleu in Paris, the first step in her goal of...well, of what, she isn't completely sure. But when she receives a phone call with potentially tragic news, every tentative plan she had comes crashing down.
Contractor Marshall Bryant realized he loved Jess as far more than the best friends they've been for over two decades the day he took her to the airport last year. His plan is to ask her to be his date to his older brother's October wedding...until she comes home early under unfortunate circumstances.
In the wake of tragedy, Marshall nudges Jess to do the one thing she's been too scared to do--open her own bakery. As they renovate the old bakery that closed unexpectedly ten years ago, Marshall and Jess find themselves caught up in three mysteries: where the former bakery owners disappeared to, why Jess's father isn't able to be found, and the mystery of new, uncharted feelings between them. But when they find the answers they've been seeking, will the sometimes painful truths bring them closer together or tear them apart?
You Feel Like Home, the second book in the Bryant Family Series, is a gently told story of love, loss, and the truth that sometimes, in order to move on with our futures, it means letting go of the past.