First time reading Sandra Kitt and it nearly drove me mental bananas; yet I could not stop (It was like a train wreck that I couldn't help but watch... What can I say). However, it was too much; just too much.
It's like Sandra drew a list of ALL the issues that African-Americans have to deal with and decided that she, in a subtle yet totally obvious way, had to solve each and every one of those issues with this book. *We hear you, Sandra*
There were way too many things happening in this book. Normally I wouldn't mind a book that has several layers and complexities but this was only 380 pages and the layers just didn't fit . The main characters had a convoluted conflict and so, it seems, did every minor supporting character. There were just too many issues vying for resolution and honestly I have no idea why they were there other than as filler.
,,,,..It was exhausting and once I finished reading, I needed to decompress with a cool cloth to my brow!
On to the story.
Spoiler Alert
So Dallas, the h, is bi-racial while Alex, the H, is Italian and he saves her from a truly heinous situation when she was 15. Fast forward 15 years and they meet again under stressful circumstances but Alex also meets Dallas's supposed "BFF" and for whatever reason decides to date the BFF. Of course this deters neither Alex nor Dallas from developing feelings for each other thereby providing the author with plenty of time to fu@& with our minds becos, while they sluggishly meandered towards each other, Sandra drew on every black-white race issues and attempted to solve them, achieve world peace and might have possibly ended human suffering if given more pages. Anyways, Alex eventually realises he has feelings for Dallas, breaks it off with the BFF and blah blah blah. It was exhausting and by the time they got together, I was uninterested in their HEA.
p.s. Although Dallas was the h, she was unremarkable in everything except in her role as godmother to aforementioned BFF's daughter and I disliked her immensely.
If you want to read amazing IR stories, may I suggest anything written by Latrivia Nelson/Latrivia Welch and J.J. McAvoy's Black Rainbow.