
He created stars. She became his universe.
Kezia Blair believes true talent shouldn’t need shortcuts. But after years of singing backup and recording anonymous jingles, her shot at a real music career is slipping away. When a last-ditch audition lands her on Starbound, TV’s biggest reality show, Kezia faces a painful choice: chase stardom on someone else’s terms—or walk away for good.
Zach Falconer created Starbound to launch fresh talent—not get tangled up with it. Burned by a fame-hungry ex, he’s determined to protect his show from scandal and his heart from pain.
But Kezia’s passion, honesty, and refusal to play the game shake his carefully controlled world. And the deeper their connection grows, the harder it becomes to protect the lines between love, loyalty, and career.
In an industry where image is everything, can they hold onto what matters most… or will success cost them the truth—and each other?
A soulful, slow-burn Christian romance about integrity, ambition, and the price of staying true.
If you love the thrill of live music shows, where singers step into the spotlight, and find their voices—you’ll love this story. It’s a Christian romance full of inspiration, faith, and the journey of discovering confidence. I didn’t want this story to end.
–Amazon Reviewer
This Christian contemporary romance was everything! I give it all the stars. When I realized the length of this book, I was a little worried, but boy was I in for a HUGE surprise. I could not put this book down. I was completely enthralled. If it had been up to me, I would have holed up with my book and done nothing but read it start to finish.
–Amazon Reviewer
I have a love/hate relationship with Christian fiction. I love a good clean novel with Christian values woven throughout in a natural manner. I even love the moral of the story sort of message, as long as it’s presented in a natural, good way. I hate Christian fiction when it feels like the characters’ religion is shoved in your face and when the characters are so focused on quoting scriptures or presenting Christian messages that it just feels unnatural and distracting. Fortunately, this is in the “love” category. These characters feel like someone I would meet at my church or at another Christian church.
— Amazon Reviewer




