What Is The Feels Like Right Now

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What Love Feels Like

Latrice is married to the good looking Calvin Stewart. He swept her off her feet putting an end to her party girl life style. He was different than the unemployed losers of her past; had his own money and plenty of it. Blinded by his charm and finances, she fell in love and in no time at all walked down the aisle to become Mrs. Stewart. Unbeknownst to her, the man she married was a wolf in sheep's clothing. He makes it his daily chore to beat her into submission. She loses her identity and almost her life before realizing she has to get away. She escapes and seeks safety among friends where she finds the one thing she never expected, true love. Marlon Wright has tried his best to make his wife happy, but the more he tries the more she complains. She takes her need for excitement to far and winds up down a path of lies and manipulation. When she goes too far all hell breaks loose and she will stop at nothing to convince Marlon that she is still the woman he fell in love with, but she better be ready for the competition. Someone else catches Marlon's eye and he struggles to keep his composure.
The Truth of Right Now

Author: Kara Lee Corthron
language: en
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Release Date: 2017-01-03
Two isolated teens struggle against their complicated lives to find a true connection in this “timely and timeless” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review) debut novel about first love and the wreckage of growing up. Lily is returning to her privileged Manhattan high school after a harrowing end to her sophomore year and it’s not pretty. She hates chemistry and her spiteful lab partner, her friends are either not speaking to her or suffocating her with concerned glances, and nothing seems to give her joy anymore. Worst of all, she can’t escape her own thoughts about what drove her away from everyone in the first place. Enter Dari (short for Dariomauritius), the artistic and mysterious transfer student, adept at cutting class. Not that he’d rather be at home with his domineering Trinidadian father. Dari is everything that Lily needs: bright, creative, honest, and unpredictable. And in a school where no one really stands out, Dari finds Lily’s sensitivity and openness magnetic. Their attraction ignites immediately, and for the first time in what feels like forever, Lily and Dari find happiness in each other. In twenty-first-century New York City, the fact that Lily is white and Dari is black shouldn’t matter that much, but nothing’s as simple as it seems. When tragedy becomes reality, can friendship survive even if romance cannot?