The Running Series Complete Collection: 3-Book Set plus Bonus Novella (193 page)

Read The Running Series Complete Collection: 3-Book Set plus Bonus Novella Online

Authors: Suzanne Sweeney

Tags: #Romance, #New Adult, #BEACH, #Contemporary, #Suspense, #FOOTBALL

BOOK: The Running Series Complete Collection: 3-Book Set plus Bonus Novella
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B
ay Breeze

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz Malibu® coconut rum
  • 2 oz cranberry juice
  • 2 oz pineapple juice

Directions:

  1. Blend ingredients and serve over ice.

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S
lippery Panties

Ingredients

  • 1 oz vanilla vodka
  • 1 oz butterscotch schnapps
  • 1 oz hazelnut liqueur

Directions:

  1. Fill shaker with ice
  2. Add vodka, butterscotch schnapps and hazelnut liqueur
  3. Shake well
  4. Strain into a short glass filled with ice

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I
rish Black and Tan

Ingredients

  • 6 oz Smithwick's Ale
  • 6 oz Guinness Draught

Directions:

  1. Add Smithwick's Ale to pint glass.
  2. Add Guinness Draught beer by pouring it over the back of a spoon.

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D
ouble Irish Coffee

Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup hot coffee
  • 1/2 oz Irish Cream liqueur
  • 1/2 oz Irish whiskey
  • 1 oz. sweetened whipped cream

Directions:

  1. Pour the hot coffee into a warmed Irish Coffee glass or heavy mug.
  2. Top with the whiskey and then the whipped cream.
  3. Serve immediately.

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D
irty Girl Scout

Ingredients

  • 1 oz vodka
  • 1 oz Kahlua® coffee liqueur
  • 1 oz Bailey's® Irish cream
  • 1 oz white crème de menthe

Directions:

  1. Mix the vodka, Kahlua and Bailey's and pour over ice.
  2. Pour the crème de menthe down the center of the glass.
  3. Looks gross, but tastes delicious!

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D
irty White Mother

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 oz brandy
  • 1/2 oz Kahlua® coffee liqueur
  • light cream

Directions:

  1. Pour brandy and Kahlua into an old-fashioned glass filled with ice cubes and stir.
  2. Float cream on top and serve.

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R
ed Headed Slut

Ingredients

  • 1 oz peach schnapps
  • 1 oz Jagermeister® herbal liqueur
  • cranberry juice

Directions:

  1. Shake all ingredients with ice.
  2. Serve without ice in a small rocks glass.
Language of Flowers

F
lowers are colorful, natural and beautiful. They have traditionally been given as gifts for centuries. Different flowers have different meanings, though, and they developed these meanings because of their histories and associations with certain practices. Flowers today make a lovely gift to acknowledge love, friendship, congratulations and sympathy.

Pink Tulip

Anyone who wishes to spread cheerful messages to their friends and loved ones should send a bouquet of pink tulips, for they are a symbolic representation of the ultimate happiness a person could achieve.

White Tulip

A white tulip symbolizes forgiveness, purity and serenity. Tulips are grown from bulbs and bloom in the spring. They are identified by a cup-shape of pointed petals atop a tall, green stem. White tulips denote a new beginning and a sense of worthiness. Giving someone white tulips tells them that you wish for them to forgive you and that you want a fresh start. It denotes that you want your relationship and events to be pure and seen as worthy, with any mistakes in the past forgiven and forgotten.

Hyacinths

Hyacinths are grown from bulbs and bloom in the spring. They are identified by fragrant clusters of bell-shaped flowers. Depending on the color, the hyacinth flower denotes different meanings. A purple hyacinth is an emblem of forgiveness and means "I am sorry," "Please forgive me" and "Sorrow." To tell someone that you are sorrowful over an event and wish for them to forgive you, give them a bouquet of purple hyacinth flowers to represent these emotions.

Red Rose

Red is universally considered the most passionate color, so it's no wonder that a red rose symbolizes intense emotions of the heart. The Greeks and Romans associated red with their love goddesses, and that tradition remains evident with red roses playing a role in courtship and romance today. The number of flowers you give in a bouquet is also heavy with symbolism. A solitary rose is the calling card of a long-standing admirer, whereas a husband in the doghouse may send an abundant arrangement of two dozen flowers to get back into his wife's good graces.

Dahlias

Symbolizing hope for an everlasting union between two people, dahlia flowers are presented to couples at engagement parties and weddings. These flowers, which bloom in white and a variety of showy hues, including pink, crimson, orange and yellow, are given as an anniversary gift in celebration of 14 years of marriage, although the origin of this tradition is unknown.

Heather

It can represent admiration, beauty and good luck, and it can also be associated with solitude and protection. More specifically, the color of the heather flower influences its meaning. Traditional purple heather is used to represent admiration, beauty and solitude, while pink heather is associated with good luck. If white heather is chosen, it means protection from danger.

Forget-Me-Not

Long a flower of historical legend, forget-me-nots are as persistent and hardy as the stories they inspire. They have long been considered a representation of true love and memories.

White Daisy

Daisies hold different meanings and can represent both truth and lies simultaneously.  The daisy flower is associated with purity, patience, innocence, loyal love, beauty, and simplicity.

Purple Iris

The iris symbolizes hope, and is the emblem of both France and Florence, Italy. It has also spawned the fleur-de-lis, based on the blade-shaped foliage and graceful curls of the flower. The name of the flower, Iris, derives from the Greek word for rainbow, given because of the different color varieties available. The flower grew in Mary Gardens, where it is said that the leaf shapes were an example of the sorrows that "pierced her heart."

Purple Orchid

The purple orchid, tropical and delicate, has lush, velvety petals and strikingly rich color that makes it especially captivating. Orchids represent beauty and love. Purple orchids, especially, symbolize love. The orchid’s star-shaped allure is deepened by its color, traditionally associated with royalty and refinement in many cultures.

Violet

The violet flower is a pledge of
faithfulness.
  In his sonnets, Shakespeare used the violet as a symbol of humility and constancy in love.  A dream of violet flowers was said to foretell an advancement in life.

Gardenia

The added beauty of these flowers is that they convey intense emotional meanings, which if given as a gift, helps express a person's feelings to someone. The gardenia, therefore, signifies joy, purity, secret love and is associated with thoughts of beauty.

Sunflower

Their distinctive and brilliant appearance makes it easy to see why sunflowers have long held our fascination, mostly for their unique combination of striking beauty.  The sunflower turns to follow the sun. Their open faces symbolize the sun itself, conveying warmth and
happiness
,
adoration
and
longevity
.

Amaryllis

Amaryllis plants are associated with
eternal and determined love
that overcomes all obstacles.  Red amaryllis plants symbolize "splendid beauty."  In Victorian times, these blooms were common gifts from a lover to the woman he admired. The plant's splash of scarlet is welcome in the dark, deep winter months, making superb ornamental centerpieces for festive tables.

Gladiolus

The gladioli gets its name from a Latin word gladius, which means sword. These flowers can also be called the sword lily because of the way that they look. The gladioli is the official flower of the Gladiators. The gladioli carry several symbolic meanings, including strength of character, sincerity, and integrity.

Banyon Tree

Known in Hindu mythology as 'the
wish-fulfilling
tree', banyans represent
eternal life
because of its seemingly ever-expanding branches.

Connect With the Author

Facebook
:

https://www.facebook.com/RunningBackToYou


GoodReads
:

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7151235.Suzanne_Sweeney


Blog
:

http://suzannesweeney.wordpress.com/


Pinterest
:

http://www.pinterest.com/SweeneyWrites/


Email
:

[email protected]
 


About the Author

Suzanne Sweeney is a graduate of Georgian Court University where she studied Education and Sociology.  For some time now, she has been sharing her love of literature with the young minds who sit before her in class each and every day.  After years of teaching the art of writing, Suzanne has finally taken her own advice and put pen to paper in order to produce her debut novel, Running Back to You.  She writes what she lives, residing in the community she loves, Point Pleasant, with her family who provide a constant source of inspiration and support.

For more information on this novel and author, please visit http://suzannesweeney.wordpress.com

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