

About
Sophie Bloom writes sweet, funny, heartwarming romances about small towns, second chances, and happily-ever-afters that make you sigh and smile. When she’s not dreaming up meet-cutes or cheering for her quirky cast of characters, Sophie can usually be found with a mug of tea in hand, a stack of books on her nightstand, and fresh flowers somewhere close by. She believes every story is better with laughter, love, and at least one perfectly timed kiss.
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She makes potatoes for judges. He makes them for people. Now the whole town is taking bets on which one of them will crack first.
Odette Pascal did not leave a respectable career, sink her life savings into a food truck, and spend years mastering the art of the potato just to be outsold by a man who puts jarred cheese sauce on fries and calls it napalm.
Unfortunately, Penn Calder is very good at what he does.
His battered food truck, Fry Hard, has a line around the block. His customers adore him. His tip jar has jokes. And after the Bellflower Bay Summer Festival parks him ten feet from Odette’s elegant Gilded Tuber, he seems determined to make her lose her temper one stolen salt shaker at a time.
Then the festival announces the Golden Spud competition.
Ten days. Ten culinary challenges. Ten thousand dollars to the winner.
Odette needs that money to save her business. Penn needs it for reasons he refuses to talk about. And when their increasingly ridiculous feud goes viral, one bad decision in front of half the town turns a potato competition into something much more dangerous.
The loser has to work for the winner.
For one month.
It should be simple. Odette has technique. Penn has the crowds. She has culinary tweezers. He has a squeeze bottle and absolutely no respect for boundaries.
But somewhere between stolen kitchen equipment, midnight cooking, a storm that changes the rules, and a rivalry neither of them seems quite as eager to end as they should be, winning starts to look a lot more complicated.
Because the only thing hotter than the fryers on Rival’s Row is the possibility that Odette and Penn have been fighting the wrong battle all along.
HOT POTATO is a sweet, laugh-out-loud enemies-to-lovers romantic comedy featuring rival food trucks, a town with no respect for privacy, one spectacularly ill-advised bet, secret midnight kisses, and enough potatoes to constitute a food group.


Lark Beaumont has one plan for the Fourth of July: honor her late grandmother by running Mimi’s legendary lemonade stand at Savannah’s Forsyth Park festival. Dogs, chaos, and all.
She didn't plan on Callum Prescott. Cal is the impossibly organized corporate attorney whose charity lemonade stand is assigned the booth right next to hers. He has a color-coded binder. She has two mischievous dogs named Biscuit and Gravy. He labels his lemons individually. She hasn’t measured an ingredient since 2019.
They're a disaster waiting to happen. But when a surprise competition twist forces them to collaborate on a honey-rosemary lemonade recipe, Lark discovers that the buttoned-up lawyer who alphabetizes his citrus fruits might be exactly the kind of chaos she never knew she needed. And Cal discovers that the free-spirited dog walker who doesn’t believe in plans might be the best thing that ever happened to him.
As Savannah’s Fourth of July festival builds toward its fireworks finale, these two opposites will have to decide: Is independence really freedom if it keeps you from the one person who makes your life bigger?
The Lemonade Stand Proposal is a laugh-out-loud, swoon-worthy sweet romance about messy kitchens, mischievous dogs, and the courage it takes to let someone in.


Dr. Felix Graymont has spent nine years proving soulmates don’t exist.
He has four hundred and twelve pages of evidence, six versions of a laminated itinerary, and a career built on explaining why people mistake coincidence for destiny. Then Indie Carmichael crashes into his parking lot covered in gold glitter.
And they both hear the same song. Not from a radio. Not from a phone. Inside their heads.
Indie has waited her whole life for the legendary Song of Fate that has matched generations of women in her family with their soulmates. Felix has spent his entire career debunking it. Which is a little awkward now that he’s Case 412.
When Indie's beloved van dies and her one shot at a record deal waits nine hundred miles west, Felix reluctantly agrees to give her a ride to Colorado. Strictly for research purposes, obviously.
Now he’s trapped in an offensively clean sedan with a sunshine musician who names inanimate objects, treats his itinerary like a loose suggestion, and seems determined to prove that life is better with the windows down.
She believes the song led her to him. He believes there has to be a rational explanation. But somewhere between roadside diners, disastrous research interviews, one very inconvenient guitar, and a road trip that refuses to stay on schedule, Felix begins to wonder if he’s spent his whole life studying love from the safest possible distance.
The data says soulmates are impossible. The song would like a word.
The Soulmate Song is a sweet, laugh-out-loud road trip romance featuring a grumpy professor, a glitter-covered sunshine musician, only one bed, kisses only, and one spectacularly inconvenient case of fate.




