Yield, Sawyer Bennett
Yield, Sawyer Bennett
List: $11.99 | Sale: $8.40
Club: $5.99

Yield
A Legal Affairs Story (Book #3 of Cal and Macy's Story)

Author: Sawyer Bennett

Narrator: Lee Samuels, Kirsten Leigh

Unabridged: 5 hr 35 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/19/2016


Synopsis

Yield (verb): to surrender or submit (oneself) to anotherMacy Carrington is broken. The strong, beautiful woman that I’ve unwittingly fallen in love with is all kinds of broken from a secret that she has carried for far too long.A secret so dark, she has gone to great lengths to protect it. A secret that I’m terrified will one day rip her away from me.The only time Macy frees herself from the darkness is when she is naked and in my arms. When I am deep inside her body, there is nothing she fears. When she wraps herself around me, she is at peace. If she would only yield to me completely, I know I can set her free.**Cal and Macy’s story is a trilogy within the Legal Affairs series. All three books—Clash, Grind and Yield—must be read in order. You do not have to read the other Legal Affairs books to understand this trilogy.

About Sawyer Bennett

Since the release of her debut contemporary romance novel, Sawyer Bennett has written more than thirty books and has been featured on both the New York Times and USA Today bestseller lists on multiple occasions. A reformed trial lawyer from North Carolina, Sawyer uses real life experience to create relatable, sexy stories that appeal to a wide array of readers. From new adult to contemporary romance, Sawyer writes something for just about everyone. Sawyer likes her Bloody Marys strong, her martinis dirty, and her heroes a combination of the two. When not bringing fictional romance to life, Sawyer is a chauffeur, stylist, chef, maid, and personal assistant to a very active toddler, as well as full-time servant to two adorably naughty dogs. She believes in the good of others, and that a bad day can be cured with a great workout, cake, or a combination of the two.


Reviews

Goodreads review by JoJo

Like nothing I've read before, except, I flatter myself, in my own journals. For me, it's the juxtaposition of the major and life-altering with the ordinary and life-constituting that gives journals their unique flavor. But while reading Truitt's entries revealed this phenomenon to me in my own jour......more