Synopses & Reviews
Eric Jerome Dickey, the six-time New York Times bestselling author of Drive Me Crazy, returns with a sizzling new novel of romance and betrayal. Just how well do we ever really know the person sleeping next to us?
Sometimes we know everything.
Sometimes we can never know enough.
In Genevieve, Eric Jerome Dickey has crafted a masterfully twisted tale of intrigue, hidden identities, and self-discovery. Its the tale of a man torn between the love of his beautiful wife and the sudden arrival of his wifes sistera mysterious and provocative woman who offers him the passion he craves, but at a steep price.
Both women harbor secrets, the answers to which appear to lie in a small Southern town filled with darkness, danger, and the promise of pain. Soon nothing is as it seems and no one is who they claimed to be, including the man caught in the middle. As the truth bubbles closer to the surface, everyones world threatens to fall apart.
In a story packed with revelations at every turn, Eric Jerome Dickey takes us on a journey filled with deception, careening down a highway bound for destiny . . . and disaster.
Synopsis
The eight-time New York Times best-selling author - the man the New York Times recently called Chick-Lit King - is back with a sizzling new novel of romance and betrayal.
Synopsis
Genevieve is brilliant and beautiful. Her husband has a thriving career. Together, they have a beautiful home in Los Angeles. Together, they're crazy in love. Then one day a family tragedy brings Genevieve back to her Alabama hometown, back to a past she hoped her husband would never discover, and back to secrets shared by her sister Kenya-mysterious, teasing, and dangerously irresistible. Soon, Genevieve's husband will discover the truth about his wife and her family. Something he was never meant to know-and a desire he was never meant to explore.
About the Author
Originally from Memphis, Tennessee, Eric Jerome Dickey is the author of eleven novels, including the bestselling Drive Me Crazy, Naughty or Nice, The Other Woman, and Thieves Paradise. In a July 2004 profile, The New York Times hailed Dickey as one of the few kings of popular African-American fiction for women. Dickey writes full time.