Songwriter: Donna Weiss Joey Carbone Dennis Belfield

Producer: Kim Carnes Joey Carbone

Churning and burning
It's a love attack
Don't run for cover
It'll turn you around in your tracks
Pull you right back
And once it starts
It's like a thunder ride
Cover to cover
It's the kind of book I could write
A bestseller twice
Don't want to show the look in your eyes
Get in too close for comfort

'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love
Put out the fire and it still ain't enough
Fever to fever till it fits like a glove
'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love

Head over heels
It's not the heart that you lack
Defense is over
And you know that you had to react
Don't have to look back
Don't want to show the look in your eyes
Let him too close for comfort

'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love
Put out the fire and it still ain't enough
Fever to fever till it fits like a glove
'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love

Never will be and there never was
Nothin' better for me, no nothin'
And there never will be no nothin'

Go on and show the look in your eyes
Get in too close for comfort
'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love
Put out the fire and it still ain't enough
Fever to fever till it fits like a glove
'Cause there ain't nothin' better than love

Kim Carnes

Kim Carnes (born July 20, 1945) is an American singer-songwriter. Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, she began her career as a songwriter in the 1960s, writing for other artists while performing in local clubs and working as a session background singer with the famed Waters sisters (featured in the documentary 20 Feet from Stardom). After she signed her first publishing deal with Jimmy Bowen, she released her debut album Rest on Me in 1972. Carnes' self-titled second album primarily contained self-penned songs, including her first charting single “You’re a Part of Me”, which reached No. 35 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart in 1975. In the following year, Carnes released Sailin', which featured “Love Comes from Unexpected Places”. The song won the American Song Festival and the award for Best Composition at the Tokyo Song Festival in 1976.