
It's innocent, just talking about music but they meet again when she is sixteen and he's thirty six and he kisses her. He meets her when she is just five and he is twenty three. So Deuce is almost twenty years older than Eve.

Definitely was not an epic love story advertised! With horrible, sexist, misogynistic, selfish, woman abusing, men and pathetic door mat women. It's so not believable that these two characters love each other. It's like crazy, ORG, ridiculous drama constantly. It's actually all pretty depressing reading the over the top angst and hurt from Deuce constantly cheating and hurting Eve and being a selfrish prick, right til the end of the book. I get the author was trying to write a gritty 'One Percenter' biker book but she fails with the romance part. Eva sees in Deuce what he cannot see in himself-a man worthy of love-and Eva spends her lifetime proving to him that her undeniable love is the one thing he can’t live without.

Fate continues to bring them together time and time again, but their twisted journey is filled with pain, betrayal, and bloodshed that could tear them apart. Their first meeting is innocent, but as Eva matures into a woman, their chance reunions evolve into a fit of lust and love. Like Eva, he was born and raised in the club-but that’s where the similarities end. Deuce West is the sexy, biker bad-ass of the Hell’s Horsemen Motorcycle Club. When she’s a young girl, Eva meets the reason for her existence. Growing up with bikers in the club lifestyle is all that she knows. Eva Fox is the princess of the Silver Demons Motorcycle Club. It grows and develops-with hurt, sacrifice, and heartache-over the span of a lifetime. This is an epic love story that knows no boundaries and has no time limits.

It’s intense, gritty and raw, dark and disturbing, and it doesn’t happen overnight. This is an all-consuming, soul-crushing, tear-your-heart-into-pieces story. Warning: This is not a typical, sappy, love story. "Harvard Book Store Celebrates 75 Years of Literature and Community". "Google Library and Harvard Offer On-Demand Books". Archived from the original on 23 January 2013. "Wellesley couple buy Harvard Book Store". Archived from the original on 26 July 2010.
Undeniable book buy in store series#
In recent years, a well-attended author event series has hosted Al Gore, Salman Rushdie, Haruki Murakami, John Updike, Orhan Pamuk, and Stephen King, in addition to a number of local writers and academics. In 2009, the store introduced an on-demand book printing service called the Espresso Book Machine, produced by New York firm On Demand Books, using books in the public domain available through Google Library. įorbes named the book store as its top bookshop in its "World's Top Shops 2005" list. With a focus on an academic and intellectual audience, the store's selection and customer service is repeatedly honored by local publications and surveys.

Though often confused with the Harvard Coop, the store has no affiliation with Harvard University or the Harvard Coop bookstore, which is managed by Barnes & Noble. įamily-owned for over seventy-five years, the store was sold in the fall of 2008 to Jeffrey Mayersohn and Linda Seamonson of Wellesley, Massachusetts, and remains an independent business. Harvard Book Store was established in 1932 by Mark Kramer, father of longtime owner Frank Kramer, and originally sold used textbooks to students. Harvard Book Store is an independent and locally owned seller of used, new, and bargain books in Cambridge's Harvard Square.
