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Release Blitz & Giveaway | Home Run by: Heidi McLaughlin (Trade Paperback)

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HOME RUN BY HEIDI MCLAUGHLIN IS NOW IN PRINT!!!!
Get the Trade Paperback TODAY!!!
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Title: HOME RUN
Author: Heidi McLaughlin
Series: The Boys of Summer
On Sale: June 6th, 2017
Publisher: Forever
Trade Paperback: $14.99
eBook: $4.99

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BLURB:

LOVE ISN’T A GAME . . .ย 

I’ve given up everything for the chance to play major league baseball. Everything. Now I’m so close I can practically hear the crowd chanting my name. There’s nothing that could take my dream away from me . . .ย 

Unless I lose focus. And Ainsley Burke is the most beautiful, distracting woman I’ve ever met. When I’m with her, I can’t think of anything else.

But no matter how much I want Ainsley, there’s no room for love in my game plan. I can give her a quick tour of the bases, but that’s it. Then I have to let her go. If she wants to think I’m a love ’em and leave ’em player, fine.ย 

All dreams require sacrifice. I just wish this one didn’t mean tearing out my own heart.

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EXCERPT

โ€œWhere are we going?โ€ I ask. I turn my ball cap around to prevent it from flying away since her convertible top is down and it looks like weโ€™re heading toward the parkway.

โ€œI thought weโ€™d go to the beach.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that like thirty minutes away?โ€

Ainsley glances at me quickly before turning back and focusing on the road. โ€œDo you have a curfew or something?โ€

I shake my head. โ€œNope, drive on.โ€ I may not have a curfew, but six a.m. comes very early, and itโ€™s our last practice before we start pre-season play. I suppose, since I went without much sleep in college, one night now isnโ€™t going to hurt me. Besides, itโ€™s for a good cause. Iโ€™m into Ainsley, and if she wants to take me to the beach, Iโ€™m going to let her.

She turns up the radio and starts singing along to the song. I know it as well so I join in, and before I know it, weโ€™re having our own karaoke party while weโ€™re cruising down the road. When we hit a stoplight, I expect her to stop singing, but she doesnโ€™t, and the people pulled up along the side of us start singing too.

Before I know it, weโ€™re at the beach. The car is shut off, the music has stopped, and the only thing you can hear are the waves crashing onto the shore.

โ€œComing here at night affords me the ability to sit and think without too many people around.โ€

โ€œIs it safe?โ€ I ask.

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I never thought about that. I suppose in some aspects itโ€™s not, but there are always a few other people around soโ€ฆโ€ She gets out of her car before finishing her sentence. She shouldnโ€™t walk the beach alone at night, but who am I to tell her otherwise? I quickly follow her, catching up with her in the sand.

We walk side by side until the dry sand turns wet, and then we both sit down.

โ€œWhen I was little, my mom used to bring me here all the time. Iโ€™d swim and play while she read her book or sheโ€™d come in the water with me. Itโ€™s funny, when youโ€™re a kid, you have no worries in life, but the minute you become an adult, everything changes.โ€

I wish I could relate. โ€œMy life was the opposite. Iโ€™ve always had the pressure to succeed in baseball on my shoulders. My dad, he was strict about everything. In fact, if he knew I was out here now and not sleeping, heโ€™d have something to say about that.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s sad.โ€

Shrugging, I slip off my socks and sneakers, burying my toes into the cold sand. โ€œIt is, but I wouldnโ€™t be where I am today without that kind of structure.โ€

โ€œDo you like playing baseball?โ€ Ainsley slips off her shoes and pulls her legs to her chest, wrapping her arms around them tightly.

โ€œI love it. I love everything about the game.โ€

โ€œDo you ever wish you had done something else?โ€

I think about her question and wonder what else I couldโ€™ve done. If my dad and I hadnโ€™t turned to tossing the ball in the backyard, where would we be? For us, it was therapeutic and a way for me to express how angry and hurt I was that my mom had died. The harder I threw, the better I felt. The more my dad cringed when he caught the ball, the more satisfying it was that he was hurting as much as I was.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what else I wouldโ€™ve done, honestly. Baseball is what I know. My dad used it as a tool to help me cope with my momโ€™s passing, and before I knew it, I was trying out for these elite baseball clubs and making all-star teams. College and major league scouts would come watch my games in high school, and I thought โ€˜Wow, this could be a career for me.โ€™ I was drafted out of high school but chose to go to college first. I wanted something to fall back on in case baseball didnโ€™t work out.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s your degree in?โ€ She turns and looks at me. The moon is casting enough of a glow that I can make out her facial features. Now would be the perfect time to lean over and kiss her, but I have to keep reminding myself that itโ€™s not what she wants from me.

โ€œWell, the only thing that made sense.โ€

Ainsley holds her hand up. โ€œDonโ€™t tell me, itโ€™s something to do with sports.โ€

I nod, holding back laughter. โ€œYeah, broadcasting. I figure I can become a commentator or something when I retire.โ€

โ€œInteresting,โ€ she says, turning back toward the ocean.

I lean into her, bumping her with my shoulder. โ€œDonโ€™t be like that.โ€

โ€œLike what?โ€

โ€œLike I took the easy way out with my degree or my career isnโ€™t the same as a doctor or whatever.โ€

โ€œIs it though?โ€

โ€œBaseball is Americaโ€™s game. It doesnโ€™t know social class, race, or any other classification. Itโ€™s a game every one can play and afford to participate in. You donโ€™t have to have straight Aโ€™s to go to college to play ball. Hell, most players come to the majors right out of high school. Itโ€™s a game for everyone.โ€

โ€œA game that you make millions of dollars at.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s no different than being an actor. We bring entertainment to people.โ€ I counter her claim.

โ€œI donโ€™t like this argument,โ€ she says.

โ€œMe neither. I think we should talk about something else.โ€

โ€œLike what?โ€ she asks.

Taking her hand in mind, I kiss the top of it before meeting her gaze. โ€œLike you going out with me.โ€

She shakes her head.

โ€œI know, you donโ€™t date athletes, so think of me as a sports broadcaster.โ€ I waggle my eyebrows at her, and she laughs.

โ€œYouโ€™re hard to resist, Cooper Bailey.โ€

With those words, I pull her closer. โ€œThen stop resisting me, Ainsley.โ€ This is my chance, and I take it. My lips brush against hers lightly, testing her resolve. Sheโ€™s either going to punch me, push me away, or let me continue to kiss her.

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REVIEW

โœฎ โœฎ โœฎ โœฎ โœฎ

Home Run is the second book in the boys of the summer series. It can also be read as a standalone.

I fell hard for Cooper Baileyโ€™s character. he was adorable when it came to Ainsley Burke.

Cooper is a rookie for the Boston Renegades. Heโ€™s is on his way to the top with big dreams and some serious goals in mind. but he is quick to learn that sometimes the team goals are worth more than your own goals.

Ainsley is a zookeeper who has recently stepped down from tending the animals to care for her mother who is losing her battle to cancer.

Cooper is hung up on Ainsley when he meets her at a Charity event for underprivileged children thatย takes place at the zoo. One look and the chemistry between the two sparks but Ainsley has sworn off athletes after her heart was broken by a football player.

I remember yelling several times at my kindle for Ainsley to get over her issues and give Cooper a chance.

Home Run is a really cute story! I loved Cooper! Sigh, Why can’t all men be like Cooper Bailey ๐Ÿ˜‰ Ainsley is a very lucky girl!

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The Boys of Summer
Boys Of Summer
SERIES

Third Base, #1
Home Run, #2
Grand Slam, #3

Series Page on Goodreads

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

HEIDI MCLAUGHLIN BIO

Heidi McLaughlin is aย New York Timesย andย USA Todayย bestselling author. Originally from the Pacific Northwest, she now lives in picturesque Vermont with her husband and two daughters. Also renting space in their home is an over-hyper beagle/Jack Russell, Buttercup, a Highland West/mini schnauzer, Jill, and her brother, Racicot. When she’s isn’t writing stories, you’ll find her sitting court-side at her daughters’ basketball games.ย 

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