If you know my words, then you know I infuse them with pieces of myself. Each character is a little bit of me. But Sonnet Rosewood, she is closer than almost all the rest. My snark, my wounds, my past, it all comes back to me when I think of Blind Melody. Sonnet is my ache, my shame, my hope for love when it seems out of reach, a fairytale. I didnāt write her; I let her out of my heart, let her stain the page. If you want to know me, read Blind Melody, watch Sonnet and Hunter dance. Blind Melody is Book 3 of the Muse & Music Series. It can be read as a standalone. āIām not a song. I donāt have blue eyes like the girls you sing about. I have a blue soul.ā Sonnet Rosewood needs a new chapterāthe kind that doesnāt remind her of anything sheās leaving behind in the Ozarks. So, when opportunity beckons to escape to the Great Smoky Mountains for a writing retreat, she answers with a firmĀ yes. But the arrival of a decade-old and short-lived fling at the cabin changes everything. āHow quickly we push past the barriers we erected between ourselves for years.ā Recognizing the beautiful voice of the unexpected guest reminds her of his name, Hunter Hart: the man she wrote as forgettable, who vowed to show her he was anythingĀ butĀ if given a second chance. āMaybe you want the challenge more than you want the girl.ā What started as Sonnetās attempt to escape her past thrusts her straight into the responsibilities of anotherās, making their future sound more and more like the sad songs theyāve been writing together. While their passion is undeniable, their happily-ever-after is not. The single fatherās rules leave little room for a different kind of love. And Sonnet has rules of her ownāto never again wait for a man to open his heart to her. You can read the entire Muse & Music Series for less than $4: https://books.jrrogue.com/museandmusic













