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Review: Small Town Frenzy by S.L. Scott

My biggest rival is the father of my child.

He just doesn’t know it yet.

Sleeping with my family’s enemy wasn’t planned. Oops. Too late.

It was a one-night stand in Costa Rica, and names were the last thing we wanted to exchange. What can I say? The man was hot as sin.

Blue-sky eyes.
Broad, athletic shoulders.
A smile that just about did me in.

I came home with more than his cowboy hat as a souvenir.

Four years later, that sweet memento calls me Mommy.

I’m a busy single mom helping to run the Dover empire. The last thing I need is a vacation fling showing up wearing the one name on the back of his baseball jersey that’s forbidden by my family. Greene.

Annoyingly arrogant.
Infuriatingly irritating.
A smirk on his stupidly handsome face.

Just my luck when I need to break the news, he’s my son’s father.

He came to play baseball, not be a dad, so I have no intention of getting me and our son caught up in his game. But even the strongest walls have faults, and when we start spending time together, mine begin to crumble.

Is the universe giving us a second chance or are we caught up in a small-town frenzy?

Small Town Frenzy is a spicy, sports, rivals to lovers, surprise child, cowboy, small town romance where he falls first and hard. This hometown hero book is a complete stand-alone.


Cricket hooked up with a hot stranger on vacation four years ago and her life hasn’t been the same since that night. She’s a busy single mom with a little boy now and she wouldn’t change a thing because Jacob is her world. It’s disappointing that she can’t even tell the hot cowboy about his son since she doesn’t know his name, but her little family is happy and content in every way, even without daddy. Nothing could prepare her for the moment they come face-to-face again without warning, but once the opportunity presents itself, Cricket hesitates.

There’s a lot more affecting their relationship than simply the son Griffin doesn’t know about yet, like the generational curse and longstanding feud between their families, a feud with entire towns on either side. Cricket is understandably worried about sharing her son with his father because Griffin is a stranger, but he works hard to prove himself worthy of her trust and become a fixture in both of their lives. I loved everything about these two and couldn’t put this book down. I’d like to thank the author and The Author Agency for providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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