Anna Adams was in the US Navy, also working on a business degree full-time, when her first child was born. That little guy changed her life--created priorities. She wanted her children to grow up, believing they could do the most unlikely things.
Like writing--which she'd done since she was old enough to force someone to listen to stories and then old enough to pick up a pencil and a piece of paper.
She switched to an English degree--and ignored her husband when he asked if she planned to "open an English store," and eventually found jobs doing any kind of writing. And she learned to write books.
Twenty-something books later, she's a USA Today Bestseller, and she's still believes in unlikely things. Like true love that everyone can believe in.
I liked it but it wasn't great. The author didn't give enough background, so a lot of things seemed forced. We didn't get enough of the backstory - how Cate and Allan's relationship were before all this happened, and Dan's relationship with his parents. I find it hard to believe that he got this messed up just because of the accident. I think all this must have been festering before and then the accident was the last straw. I loved the aunt and uncle - actually I liked all the characters except Richard - he was a moron.
Unexpectedly very well written considering some cliched plot elements like amnesia and pregnancy. The H and h have been married 20 years and have a 18 year old son who is graduating and then they are pregnant with twins, losing their business as their accountant embezzled their money. A lot of action and drama to keep a reader engrossed. You can definitely empathize with all the characters, their choices and motivations. What really makes this book enjoyable are the secondary characters with interesting quirks.