CAN AN AVERAGE GIRL SURVIVE
HOLLYWOOD?
HEARTTHROB
Hollywood Hearts #1
Belinda Williams
Released Nov 10th, 2016
CAN AN
AVERAGE GIRL SURVIVE HOLLYWOOD?
Ally Valenti doesn’t belong in
Hollywood. Not like her friend and actress, Lena Lyons. Lena’s convinced Ally
to pursue her dreams of fashion design, starting with some gowns for the awards
season.
Which Ally will get around to
creating as soon as she can stop looking at Jacob Swan, Lena’s latest co-star.
Not that she’s staring. Ally’s skeptical of anything celebrity and it’s not
like she’d be pathetic enough to fall for a Hollywood heartthrob.
Then Ally learns there’s more to
Jacob than his good guy, all-American persona. She finds herself torn between
the desire to get to know him better and her determination to stay out of the
limelight.
Of course the media has other
ideas—and someone doesn’t like all the attention Ally’s getting. When threats
aimed at destroying her fashion career go too far, Ally’s convinced she’s
living in crazy town.
The sensible thing would be to
retreat home before it all ends in spectacular fashion. But will Ally be
leaving more than her dreams behind if she says goodbye to Hollywood?
This glamorous, fast-paced
contemporary romance that will make you smile, is perfect for fans of Rachel
Gibson, Victoria Dahl, Susan Elizabeth Phillips, and Liliana Hart.
“Is it true?”
I winced
and moved the phone away from my ear. At eighteen, my youngest cousin could
still occasionally be painfully teenaged. For reasons that continued to elude
me, Bella and I had formed a strange sort of sisterly bond. “Hi, Bella,” I said
when it was safe to bring the phone back to my ear.
“Ally, don’t
mess with me. Are you seriously in LA?”
“Yes.”
“What?” she screeched. I directed a pained
look in Lena’s direction while she continued. “I go away for the summer and you
just up and leave? How could you?”
“You were
at summer camp.”
“I could
have come to LA with you!”
I sighed.
“No, you couldn’t. You’ve still got to finish senior year. Besides, it was kind
of a last-minute thing. When Lena—”
“Bullshit!”
“Bella!
Watch your mouth!”
I heard her
take a deep breath. “Sorry. I’m just not sure I believe you, Ally.” I didn’t
miss the note of contempt in her voice. “When Mom told me where you had gone,
and who you are supposedly with, I didn’t believe her. I mean, come on, my mom
calls social media ‘social medium’ and thinks Twitter is ‘tweeter.’ Personally,
I think you’re having some sort of mid-life crisis.”
I couldn’t
help myself and smiled. Aunt Lisa’s appalling lack of knowledge of all things
twenty-first century was pretty funny, but I sobered at the thought my teenage
cousin considered me old enough to be having a mid-life crisis. Arabella
obviously didn’t remember Lena because she had only been a toddler when Lena
lived in Providence. And maybe I was closer to middle age than I wanted to
admit. “I’m hanging up now,” I told her. “Call you back on Facetime.”
I ended the
call before she could protest and turned to Lena. “Bear with me, please?”
“Of course.
You know I love your family.”
“That makes
someone,” I muttered as I scrolled through the contacts in Facetime. “OK, here
goes.”
After a
brief wait, Arabella’s face came up on the screen of my cell phone.
Upon seeing
me, she crossed her arms and shot me an unimpressed look. She had the same
shoulder-length dark loose waves I had, but was one of the few members of our
family blessed with Uncle Tony’s bright blue eyes.
“Ooh,
you’re in a cab,” she drawled.
“It’s not a
cab.” Tired of her sass, I pointed the phone at Lena.
Lena waved
and her perfect red nails glinted under the car’s interior light. “Hi,
Arabella. Nice to meet you.”
In the split second it took for all the color
to drain from Bella’s olive complexion, she managed to draw another breath.
“Oh my
fucking God, it is you!”
I jolted in
my seat at her crystal-shattering pitch and quickly lowered the volume.
Alright, maybe this wasn’t such a good idea after all.
Her eyes
rounded in a sort of mad haze. “When Aunt Rosa told me Ally had a model friend
in high school, I didn’t believe her. You’ve got to admit it is pretty hard to believe because Ally’s
not the popular type. I mean, as if! Ally’s one of the most boring people I
know—no offense, Ally.”
I saw
Lena’s lips quirk and I opened my mouth to put a stop to my youngest cousin’s
observations, but I was already too late.
She continued with the force of a freight
train. “I don’t know if you know this, but all Ally ever does is work and I’m
pretty sure she hasn’t been out with a guy in like forever. Even Aunty Rosa says Ally needs to get out more. So it’s
pretty hard to imagine someone with your talent hanging out with her, but then
I guess she can be kind of fun. I mean that’s why everyone asks her to babysit
all the time, the kids just love her and—”
“Bella!”
I managed to interrupt finally. “Thank you for the honest character assessment
but I think you might be boring the most famous actress in Hollywood.”
Belinda
Willliams is
a marketing communications specialist and copywriter who allowed an addiction
to romance and chick-lit to get the better of her. She was named a top ten
finalist in the Romance Writers of Australia Emerald Award in both 2013 and
2014.
Her
other addictions include music and cars. Belinda’s eclectic music taste forms
the foundation of many of her writing ideas and her healthy appreciation for
fast cars means she would not so secretly love a Lamborghini. For now she’ll
have to settle with her son’s Hot Wheels collection and writing hot male leads
with sports cars.
Belinda
lives in Sydney and blogs regularly about writing and reading at www.belindawilliamsbooks.com
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