Need a feel good story? Try Luck Be an Angel by Liza O’Connor

Need a Feel Good Story?

Try this sweet romance

Luck Be An Angel.


“This story will keep you up reading and make you believe in miracles. I couldn’t stop when I started, I had to know how the story would end. Once again, I can blame Ms. O’Connor for my lack of sleep but I really did gain so much more!”

*5 stars!!!


“I loved everything about this story. A Sweet and Fabulous ‘feel good’ Valentines story with love, laughter, and trouble on the side.”  LLB

*5 stars!!!


“If you like books that make you think and smile, question your own and society’s behaviour, and finish it with a glowing smile and renewed belief in the power of love, then I can highly recommend O’Connor’s latest gem.”  Devika Fernando

*5 stars!!!


“This is a sweet romance with a touch of angel magic! I love the wonderful bond between mom and child (all 16!) and the way Ethan looks out for them all. Luck Be An Angel is a quick read and a lovely poignant story.”

*5 stars!!!


“I loved Ethan, Sara, and her sixteen kids, each having individual personalities, strengths, and weaknesses. When Ethan meets Sara and her kids, he is automatically taken with them, as are you, the reader. It’s a wonderful and unique story that I highly recommend!!” 


https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/G/01/x-locale/common/customer-reviews/stars-5-0._CB192240867_.gif Wow awesome feel good book, started reading and could not stop until I finger. May 18, 2018

My soul felt good after reading this book. I am now looking for my angel. This book makes you believe in the Unbelievable. 

https://www.amazon.com/Luck-Be-Angel-Liza-OConnor-ebook/dp/B01N5LCAM9AMAZON

Sara is the sweetest, most patient, encouraging, and hardworking mom you’ll ever meet.  

Sadly, the ‘good people of Briarville” wish to judge and destroy Sara’s life. The shops won’t even allow her to buy from them. She has to drive all the way to Fayetteville. When she recently won a house, but had no property to build upon, the town purchased her some cheap bog-land OUTSIDE of their city limits.

What terrible unforgivable act has Sara done to make a whole town hate her? Each year on February 14, she gets pregnant with another child. When the story begins, she has sixteen boys and one in the bun. And here’s the kicker: She insists that she’s never laid with a man.

Well, the townspeople don’t believe her. So once she moves into her new home, they explain her boys can no longer attend the Briarville school. Then Child Services steps in and warns if she does not obtain a tutor in the next week, they will have to take the boys and place them in foster homes.

Thankfully, Ethan, pretending to be a tutor, arrives just in time. His motives aren’t pure, but his timing is impeccable!

Luck Be An Angel
by
Liza O’Connor

Reporter, Ethan Long, is sent into the backwoods of Arkansas to investigate a woman who claims her sixteen boys were born by Immaculate Conception. Not believing in divine intervention, Ethan plans to uncover the identity of the man who continues to impregnate Sara Smith every year, leaving her to raise her sons on nothing but luck and love. He enters their home as a tutor and eventually discovers the truth, but not before he has fallen in love with Sara and her wonderful boys. Now he must face his own crossroad in life and decide whether to follow his heart or his professional obligations.



EXCERPT

Sam came running out the back door. “Mom, our school teacher has come! Joshua’s started the interview.”

His declaration caused all the boys to drop the clothes and run into the house, leaving Sara to pick up the fallen clothes and add them to the pile requiring a second wash.

Sara hurried with her chore, worried that the poor woman would run off before she could intervene. The sight of so many boys, identical but in age, all in one room, could be a bit terrifying.

By the cluster of bodies in the kitchen, she assumed Joshua had chosen his favorite room for the interview. She shook her head and gently moved her mass of boys about so she could enter.

She heard Joshua’s voice, full of challenge. “By only moving one match, I want you to make a perfect square.”

Her eldest wasn’t interviewing; he was testing the poor woman…

She finally moved aside Colby so she could see the teacher and apologize for her son’s inquisition. Her apology was lost in the shock of discovering the teacher was not a woman. He was most decidedly a man, probably in his late thirties, with a long nose, which gave him a slightly hawkish look. His dark eyes presently sparkled with amusement as he studied the puzzle her son had posed. She liked his face. He looked like a good man. Only she didn’t want a man. She couldn’t have a man here. She had enough problems with the townspeople thinking ill of her as it was.

The man leaned over and gently tugged on the leg of one match a bit, making a tiny square in the center. The younger boys cheered on him for his success.

He stood and bowed to the applause of the boys and then grew serious when he noticed a smiling woman standing in the midst of her boys. She smiled and stepped forward.

Joshua stood up, his chest puffed out with pride. “I’ve checked him out, Ma. He’ll do just fine.”

“Does that mean they won’t take us away now?” her ten-year-old, Oliver, asked.

Peter ruffled his younger brother’s hair. “That’s right O, you can stop screaming in your sleep now.”


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