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2007
Emma Award – Favorite New Author
2006 Romance in Color Reviewers Choice Award –
Favorite New Author

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The Hip-Hop Debutantes Trilogy |
2007 Emma Award – Book of the Year 2007 Emma Award – Favorite Hero 2007 Emma Award – Favorite Heroine
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I’m Gonna Make You Love Me,
March 2006 Genesis Press ISBN-10: 1585711810
ISBN-13: 978-1585711819 Format: Trade Paperback
Make You Do Right…
Alicia Taylor is a smart and attractive
college senior who believes that willful and
determined are more than just personality
descriptions; they are a way of life. She
has goals for her life that do not include
giving in to her intense feels for her
childhood nemesis, Darren Whitman.
Determined to protect her heart from the
player no matter how reformed he claims to
be, she sets out to prove that he is not as
interested as he claims and ends up proving
that she is not as over him as she believed.
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Their wedded bliss takes a sudden turn for
the worse when Carlton’s jealousy gets the best of
him. Once he drives Latonya away, Carlton realizes
his mistrust may have cost him his soul mate. But
then he learns she has a secret that could put their
reconciliation on hold forever….
Make You Do
Wrong…
Darren Whitman has a problem. The rich businessman's
father has concocted a plan for an arranged marriage
between Darren and his childhood horror, Alicia. But
the little girl with braces and pigtails has grown
into a beautiful woman that Darren decides he wants
very much. But what else is he willing to do to get
her?
Gonna Get You!
Her resistance intrigues him as much as his
persistence woos her. And, when their attraction
leaves them with more than themselves to consider,
they find that true love cannot be forced or
arranged and, when it's right, nothing can stop it.

The ardors
of love are tested in I'm Gonna Make You Love Me; an
amazing romantic story that tears at the heart
strings and captures the soul... Ms. Bolton
showcases her creative ability to weave talent and
amorous feeling into romantic writing... Through
imaginative skill, Ms. Bolton has created a story
that makes you put your life on hold and want to
read this book in one sitting.
~ Eleanor S. Shields Shades of Romance Magazine,
5 Stars
Gwyneth Bolton's I'M GONNA MAKE YOU LOVE ME is
smart, sassy, and a whole lotta fun! I absolutely
love Alicia's determinedly stubborn streak and her
outright defiance of tradition. She's a
strong-willed character who isn't about to allow any
man, including her father tell her what to do.
Darren is just as determined but not in such an
in-your-face way. What I really adore though is that
Ms. Bolton's writing transcends color barriers. The
characters are brilliantly represented and
realistic. This is a wonderful debut story for this
obviously talented author. I can't wait for Flex's
story now. I'm dying to know more details about his
involvement with another artist.
~ Chrissy Dionne Romance Junkies, 4.5 Blue
Ribbons
I'M GONNA MAKE YOU LOVE ME is a light-hearted novel
that has memorable characters and deals with a
unique storyline. In the novel you see how pain
caused from childhood carries over to adulthood and
affects the choices you make. It also shows no
matter how hard you try to fight something, if it's
meant to be, then it shall be. A refreshing new
voice in the literary industry, Gwyneth Bolton is a
name to watch out for.
~ Eraina B. Tinnin The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers, 4
Stars
In Gwyneth Bolton's I'm Gonna Make You Love me, you
will find yourself laughing, rooting and maybe even
shedding a tear or two as you journey down the path
of love and deception with Alicia and Darren. If you
are a romance fan, this is a must read. Gwyneth
Bolton will definitely make you love her, Darren and
Alicia as you turn the pages on this exciting
romantic thriller.
~ T. Rhythm Knight APOOO Book Club, 4 Stars
The characters and the plot are very unique... The
drama that unfolds between the two will have readers
laughing, crying and sitting on the edge of their
seat wondering what will happen next... Ms. Bolton
does an excellent job of creating a vivid sense of
place with the unwavering evidence of social class.
I'M GONNA MAKE YOU LOVE ME, a rollercoaster ride,
had me on the edge of my seat each time I turned the
page. Bravo, Ms. Bolton on job well done. I would
definitely recommend this book and can't wait to
read your next one.
~ Keren Childers Romance in Color, 4 Stars

Palmer Woods Historic District, Detroit
“It’s just so archaic—a throwback to the dark ages
or at least pre-enlightenment!”
Grimacing as he watched his wife brush her hair,
Kyle thought about the best way to respond to her
statement and decided humor was the way to go.
“Well, I don’t know, Karen. Seems like you could
bump it up to at least the Victorian era. I don’t
think people were arranging marriages for their
children in the dark ages.”
Fixing the bow tie on his tuxedo, he gave her a
smile as she stopped brushing her hair and glare at
him.
“It’s not funny, Kyle. Really, Black folk just don’t
do this kind of thing. We don’t pick spouses for our
children.”
Sighing because he thought they were through with
this discussion, he tried to think of yet another
way to get his wife to understand what she clearly
did not wish to understand. Having long since made
the deal with Jonathan Whitman that allowed him to
regain control of Taylor Publishing; he was too far
in to back out. Whitman made him an offer he
couldn’t refuse—a chance to save the Taylor legacy,
business, and family name.
“You’d be surprised at what Black folk do,
especially our kind of people. It’s about control,
breeding, and family. I’ve heard stories about
mergers in my family that did not start out based on
love as we like to think about it.” Untying his
failed attempt at a bow, he tried again. “Believe it
or not, those mergers were the very mergers that
brought the family the most success. Love didn’t get
my parents anywhere.”
Were it not for his father’s gambling and bad
habits, Kyle wouldn’t have even considered the
offer. In many ways, they were lucky the Taylor name
still meant something. A scandal like the one his
father had left would have annihilated a lesser
family.
The overly indulgent lifestyle his own father had
led almost ruined the family name and made Taylor
Publishing vulnerable to a hostile takeover by
Whitman Enterprises. Whitman offered a chance to
earn it back, albeit at a high cost.
“Well my father is a Kansas City barbecue king, and
although I grew up well-off and attended all the
right schools, I was not among that elite group of
your kind of people. So, forgive me if I don’t
understand this!” Karen put the brush down, crossed
her arms over her chest, and narrowed her eyes on
him. “Those two kids that you and Whitman hope will
one day marry cannot even stand each other. They
argue every time they are near one another!”
Kyle sighed. He knew the children didn’t get along
and hoped the childhood rivalry between his daughter
and Whitman’s son would eventually go away.
“You know.” Karen’s voice calmed to a whisper. “If
your family arranged a marriage for you, or if you
didn’t have the guts to date and fall in love
outside of your tight knit group of black elites,
you and I would not be together now.”
“Probably not. If my life had followed the path I
started out on, if my father were half the man he
should have been…” Stuttering slightly, he closed
his eyes in search of the words that would make her
understand.
“I have a chance to rebuild my family’s legacy. To
do all the things my father wouldn’t or couldn’t
do.”
“And it will only cost your daughter’s future. Her
right to choose who she wants to fall in love with?
Don’t you see it’s crazy? And did I mention, Alicia
can’t stand Darren Whitman. The two of them are like
oil and water!”
“What I see is that if I don’t try this, my child
won’t have the lifestyle she deserves. I can’t abide
with that, Karen. I won’t! She will have the world
and will grow up in a world where the Taylor name
still means something.” Reaching out and touching
her shoulder, he continued, “They are kids now. Most
boys and girls don’t like each other when they are
young. She might grow to like him, even love him one
day.”
Karen lowered her gaze. By the way she clenched her
teeth he could tell she was simmering. “I don’t like
it, Kyle.”
“It will work… It has to work. When you think about
it, what more could two parents wish for? Our
daughter will marry one of the richest men in the
world. Could it be so bad for our little girl to
grow up and become Mrs. Darren Whitman?” Hearing his
own voice, he realized that in addition to trying to
convince his wife, he was trying to convince
himself. Things had to work out.
Letting out a ragged breath, he continued, “Jonathan
Whitman is letting me run my family’s company. I’m
making a lot more now than what I made when I was
trying to work my way up the corporate ladder.
Taylor Publishing is my legacy. The dinner party
that we are hosting this evening is just the start
of the big things to come. Think of the important
people who will be here. I’ll have a chance to build
the company back to its original luster. I know I
can do it. It’s my birthright.
“I’ll get to run it for now, and once they are
married, part of the company will revert back to the
Taylor family. Once there is an heir, another part
of the company will revert to the Taylor family.
Doing this will give Alicia and her future children
the family’s legacy.”
Straightening his slouched shoulders, he shrugged
and sighed. Things were truly out of his hands. “If
Alicia grows up and decides she just cannot marry
the young, rich man her daddy picked out for her,
then we’ll lose everything. Don’t you see I had to
try? I have to try.”
When his wife finally turned her gaze back to him,
he used his own expression to plead with her to
understand. He hoped one last time that she did and
that they would not have to rehash this discussion.
* * * * *
Alicia giggled as she eavesdropped on her cousin
Kendrick and his friends, Darren and Troy. The three
boys irritated her to no end, and she awoke each
morning thinking of ways to ruin any idea of fun
they might think up. The one thing an eight-year-old
girl with braces and pigtails hated most was
twelve-year-old boys who teased her and pushed her
around at whim.
Each of the older boys annoyed her and Alicia could
not decide which boy annoyed her most. Her cousin
came to visit every summer because her father said
Uncle Kelvin was a loser like the grandfather who
died before she was born. Darren Whitman and Troy
Singleton were just boys who came around whenever
Kendrick was in town. Troy lived right across the
street in a big red brick house, and Darren lived in
a huge mansion in Bloomfield Hills.
The rich boy, Darren, was the one she decided she
hated most of all. Not only was he rich and a pain,
he was also the meanest. He tugged her pigtails
anytime she got within arms reach and called her
names like metal-mouth, brat, and antenna head. The
nerve of him calling anyone names when he was so
bony and his voice went all low and then high,
sounding like tires screeching all the time.
The boys were planning to come inside out of the
heat and watch a stupid karate movie on the VCR.
Racing into the family room of their six-bedroom
classic Tudor home in Palmer Woods, Alicia turned on
the TV.
“Get out, metal-mouth; we want to watch a movie on
the big screen!” Darren barged into the room
followed by Kendrick and Troy.
“I’m watching it, so you can’t.” Gripping the remote
control in her small hands, she gave the boys her
best attempt at a threatening glare.
“Come on, Licia, you have a TV in your room. Let us
watch our movie in here.” Kendrick’s request was
just a little nicer than Darren’s.
Letting out the kind of exasperated sigh she saw
glamorous women give in the movies whenever someone
was getting on their nerves, she replied, “What part
of no don’t you understand? You have a TV in your
room. I was here first. Get lost.”
“I’m tired of this! Give me the remote and get out
of here, brat!” Snatching the remote Darren yanked
her left pigtail extra hard before walking away.
She let out a loud piercing scream, and her mother,
Karen Taylor, came running from upstairs where she
was supervising the help and getting ready for a big
dinner party.
“What is it now? You children know I am busy getting
things ready for Kyle’s dinner party. I really don’t
have time for this.” Karen placed her hands on her
hips and gave each child a pointed stare.
No visible tears accompanied Alicia’s sobbing. “I
was here first watching something, and they came in
bothering me. I was here first, and Darren hit me.
He’s mean and horrible! Mommy, they know the rules.
But they don’t care.” Burying her face in her dainty
hands, Alicia dramatically fell unto the sofa.
“Boys, was she here first?” Karen used her
no-nonsense tone.
Almost tempted to peek up from her production to
watch, Alicia didn’t want to risk having the tone
turned on herself.
“Yes,” the boys murmured in unison.
“Well you know the rules. Go and watch TV in
Kendrick’s room until Alicia is finished.”
The boys followed her mom out of the family room
with Darren bringing up the rear. Lifting her head
just in time to stick out her tongue at Darren, she
relished the view of his face twisting up in anger.
The show that was playing, like every other show,
was a re-run and didn’t interest her. Her best
friend Sonya was away at Jack and Jill camp for two
weeks, and Alicia had no one to play with or talk
to. Although Alicia was also a member of Jack and
Jill, her father felt she was too young to go away
for two weeks. So she amused herself day after day.
Deciding to go and spy on the boys again, she got
there just in time to follow them out to a huge
cluster of oak trees that extended just a few yards
from the backyard of their home. The backyard was
huge, and just behind it was what the kids felt was
a mini forest. It didn’t have nearly as many trees
as a forest, but for kids living in the city, it was
just as good. Forbidden to go back there alone,
Alicia reasoned she wouldn’t really be alone. She
would be with the boys, only they wouldn’t know it.
* * * * *
Darren kicked the rocks with all the force his
twelve-year-old feet could muster. Unaccustomed to
not getting his way, he focused his anger on that
metal-mouthed brat Alicia. He was almost tempted to
call his driver and go home, but there was nothing
to do there and no one else to play with.
He really loved spending time with Kendrick and
Troy. They were like brothers. In fact, they’d made
a blood brothers’ pack in their secret spot earlier
that summer. They were now headed to their secret
spot to come up with ways to make sure the brat
didn’t ruin the rest of the summer. They stopped
under the dark shade where oaks met so closely they
almost made a circle.
“Well she did it again. She messed up a perfect
afternoon.” Vocalizing what they all thought, Troy
was the first to speak.
“Well, we could spend the rest of the summer at one
of your houses.” Bowing his head, Kendrick kicked a
rock.
Irritated, Darren pointed out, “If we do that she
wins. No way is that little brat going to win. It’s
us against her! We can’t let that metal-mouth win.”
“It’s like she always knows what we’re going to do
next, and she beats us to it,” Troy complained.
A slight noise in the bushes drew Darren’s
attention. Motioning for the boys to be silent, he
caught a glimpse of the yellow ribbon at the end of
Alicia’s long-curly pigtail as she darted behind a
tree.
“That’s it, brat! When we catch you, you’re toast!”
he yelled.
Alicia let out a high-pitched scream and took off
running. The boys followed, but she was fast. They
each took different directions, hoping to corner
her. Gaining ground, Darren had her right in his
sight. Glancing back at him, Alicia did not see the
big rock in her path.
He watched as her foot hit the rock, and she tumbled
to the ground. He stopped in front of her and saw
that she was holding her leg and crying. It wasn’t
the loud fake sobs that she had let out earlier,
just streams of tears down her cheek. He sat down
beside her and put his arm around her.
“It’s going to be okay, Licia. Can you move your
leg? Can you walk?” He had heard people on TV ask
people who were hurt if they could move the injured
body part.
Alicia moved her leg and continued to cry. The
others came running up from different directions.
Throwing up his hands, Kendrick groaned. “Oh, man,
this is guaranteed punishment for at least a week.”
“She’s hurt her leg. You two go get your aunt and
uncle, and I’ll stay here with her.” Guilt ridden,
Darren wanted to make sure that Alicia was okay.
The other two boys ran back to the house, and he
talked to Alicia while waiting. He could have sworn
that he even made her smile—either that or she was
grimacing from the pain.
Relief washed over him when he saw Mr. and Mrs.
Taylor come running through the woods followed by
Dr. Samuels. They were all dressed in fancy clothes,
and he knew that he and the boys were going to be in
big trouble for interrupting the dinner party.
He smiled down at Alicia. “See, I told you
everything would be okay. Here’s your mom and dad.”
He waited until the adults got there before removing
his arm from her shoulder.
While examining her, Dr. Samuels asked if she could
move her leg and Darren smiled.
Mr. Taylor picked Alicia up to carry her back to the
house. The doctor had said she had a bad sprain, and
she wouldn’t be running around for a while. When
Darren was on the verge of feeling sorry for her,
Alicia lifted her head from Mr. Taylor’s shoulder
and stuck her tongue out at Darren. Furious he’d
wasted his time being nice to the little metal-mouth
brat, he kicked a rock.

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