Today, HJ is pleased to share with you Betty Corrello’s new release: 32 Days in May
Return to the Jersey Shore with a new romance by Summertime Punchline author Betty Corrello in which a young woman recently diagnosed with lupus attempts a no-strings fling with a former television star.
Nadia Fabiola wants to lose herself in Evergreen—the Jersey Shore town where she grew up vacationing with her family—and never look back at her glamorous, gainfully employed former self. After a shocking lupus diagnosis turned her life upside down, she’s desperate for a sense of control over her body, her life, and her mental health. Nadia plans on keeping her life small and boring, while continuing to ignore her sister’s relentless questioning.
Nadia’s sister isn’t the only person worried about her. When her rheumatologist not-so-subtly sets her up with his infamous former-actor cousin, Marco Antoniou, Nadia is skeptical. But Marco is gorgeous—despite carrying his own baggage from a very public burnout. After a messy (but fun) first date, they decide that a May-long fling could be just what the doctor ordered: no commitment, no strings, just one month of escape.
Their undeniable chemistry starts to feel a lot like something more and while Marco pulls Nadia deeper into his life, she is dead set on keeping her diagnosis from him. But there are only so many days in May, and only so much pretending she can do. As the stress of their whirlwind romance takes its toll on Nadia’s health, she’s forced to decide if a chance at love is worth the risk of trusting someone new.
Travel from the Jersey Shore to Rome and back in this delightfully funny, beautifully honest exploration of love, intimacy, and vulnerability while living with a chronic illness.
Enjoy an exclusive excerpt from 32 Days in May
“Hey!”
Marco Antoniou lifts a hand and waves, looking like he just stumbled out of an episode of Baywatch. Tanned and easy and warm like a summer night. He fries my corneas with a five-thousand-watt smile.
No no no no no no no no.
He’s leaning against the railing, the ocean at his back, hands shoved deep into the pockets of his perfectly worn cords, wind pulling the fabric flush against his legs, so I can make out the exact shape and girth of his thighs.
Would it be rude if I just turned on my heels and booked it?
He keeps smiling and waving and I profoundly want to believe that Marco is not my type. There’s too much smile. So much smile, it makes me tired just to look at. But when I open my mouth to say hi or hey, “Sorry!” falls out instead.
Then, the babbling starts. All the while I adjust my bucket hat, which I wear everywhere now. It serves two core functions: protecting my delicate, rash-prone face from the sun and being deeply off-putting to almost everyone.
That’s really what unites humans regardless of race, gender, or creed: no one likes a woman in a weird hat.
“It’s such a crazy, windy day, isn’t it? I was going to wear a dress, but then I remembered spring is so windy and I was like, jeez—can’t do that! And then my housemates wanted to chat, and I just got caught up . . .”
Truthfully, I don’t even know if I’m late. What I’m really trying to say is: Sorry, I forgot to be hotter. I thought maybe I would be immune to your star power. That’s why I’m wearing overalls.
“You’re totally fine, seriously,” Marco says when I’ve finally run out of steam. He’s scratching at his forearms, trying to discreetly slide a cigarette butt into his back pocket. “I got some time to, uh, take in the view.”
Smoking’s been illegal on the boardwalk for about a decade now. There are signs everywhere, telling us exactly that. But I guess Marco has never met a law he doesn’t want to break.
I turn to look at what’s behind me. The old Pirate Bay Mini Golf. I arch a brow. “And, boy, what a view.”
He laughs softly and pushes the bill of his hat back with his knuckles, like a cowboy demurring to a maiden.“Nadia, right?”
“Nadia,” I confirm.
I extend a hand at the exact moment he opens his arms—muscular with a smattering of soft black hair—and pulls me in for a hug.
It’s brief and more intimate than my last Pap smear. Underneath his white tee, Marco’s chest muscles flex. He smells like Acqua di Parma and an ashtray. His hands stay a respectful distance above my waist. I lean up on my tiptoes and tepidly pat at the center of his back when suddenly something tickles my nose and—
We break apart and I’m not even focused on the luminescent smile or the olfactory storytelling Marco’s doing, because I’ve noticed it.
Marco Antoniou has a mullet.
Not a feathered-edge ode to David Bowie or a nod to Jonathan Taylor Thomas’s soft, boyish flow.
This shit is thick, hard-bodied. It chews tobacco and pours concrete. Marco’s mullet is heavy layers of pitch-black hair, smoothed back from his face and sort of hidden under a Flyers hat, but I can still tell it’s a fucking mullet.
I take off my bucket hat and stuff it into my tote bag. We can’t both be deeply off-putting.
“My cousin said you’ve been here all winter,” Marco says. I feel his eyes follow the movement of my hand as I smooth back a fly-away curl from my face, and only once I’m absolutely positive he’s looked away, I steal a glance of my own.
Marco’s features are exactly as striking as one would expect from a star. His forehead slopes heavily toward his brow; his nose is strong with a gentle hook; his jaw square and set; and when Marco smiles, his brown eyes crinkle kindly at the corners. For all his bad behavior, he looks like a cross between an ancient warrior and an all-American sweetie pie.
“Yeah,” I say. “Since January.”
We wander toward the far end of the boardwalk, toward the Pier Point Diner and the bike rental shop with the Technicolor marquee. “I haven’t spent more than two consecutive weeks here since I moved when I was fourteen. I’m almost jealous.”
“It was a temporary thing,” I tell him. “I’m staying at my parents’ place, taking some time away. But I think I might move down here—you know, full time.”
He tilts his head and smiles, golden sun winking in his chocolate- brown eyes. “Whoa, never mind. Definitely not jealous.”
Does he see it—the dark storm cloud hanging over my head? Surely he can smell the last dredges of depression on me. Why else would a single woman in her thirties move from a major metropolitan area to a freckle of an island hanging onto New Jersey by a hope and a prayer? Maybe it’s my own myopia, but I can’t think of a single positive reason.
Don’t I ooze the frenetic energy of someone spiraling through a personal crisis? If you asked Liv, she’d say absolutely. I almost wish I could ask him.
“I needed some time away, too,” he adds quickly before flashing me a heartless smile. Or maybe there’s too much heart. Something about the way he’s looking at me feels pained. Pulled tight and double wrapped in masking tape.
Excerpt. ©Betty Corrello. Posted by arrangement with the publisher. All rights reserved.
Giveaway: One (1) copy of 32 DAYS IN MAY to two (2) winners. US-only.
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Meet the Author:
Betty Corrello is a writer, comedian, and proud Philadelphian. Her first novel was Summertime Punchline. Despite her hardened exterior, she is biologically 95% marshmallow. Her greatest passion is writing stories where opposites attract, but love is chosen. When she’s not writing, she can be found fretting about niche historical events most have forgotten––or petting her very tiny dog.
https://www.harpercollins.com/products/32-days-in-may-betty-corrello?variant=43045888819234
psu1493
I enjoyed the meet-cute and wanted to know what happened next in the story.
Diana Hardt
I liked the excerpt. It sounds like a really interesting book.
hartfiction
I enjoy a high-chemistry romance!
janinecatmom
I really liked the excerpt.
Lori
I enjoyed the excerpt.
debby236
I enjoyed the excerpt. The title made me think how 32 days would mess up the song we sing for months.
bn100
nice