They say eyes are the windows to the soul. I thought that was bullshit until I saw hers. Huge doe eyes that should have sparkled with happiness and laughter were dead and lifeless. That was the moment that changed everything. Two random meetings, nine emails, four days and a broken Angel that changed my entire world.
Angel
Such a silly name for a beautiful boy. Daisy is the savior I crave and the safety I haven’t felt in years. My world is spinning out of control but he’s the salvation that can keep me alive — if I’ll let him. Two random meetings, nine emails, four days and a broken boy that brought me back to life.
Gemma Weir is a half crazed stay at home mom to three kids, one man child and a hell hound. She has lived in the midlands, in the UK her whole life and has wanted to write a book since she was a child. Gemma has a ridiculously dirty mind and loves her book boyfriends to be big, tattooed alpha males. She's a reader first and foremost and she loves her romance to come with a happy ending and lots of sexy sex.
I’ve recently reread this book and when I find a book I reread multiple times I figure I better write a review.
I love this book because it focuses so much on Angel and her growth and how Daisy helps her with her growth. I love how Anders, Blade, and Grits show Angel/Dove their softer sides that not many people, if any, get. She isn’t someone you can treat like most people you meet. She needs tenderness from people even after she’s made immense healing. I love that Daisy is the one who can pierce her mental armor she retreats behind but your heartbreaks the first time she hides and he is lost on how to help. I like that Daisy accepted his feelings and didn’t a lot of back and forth. He accepted the connection between the two of them and nurtured it so it could grow on its own instead of forcing it into one direction or another.
My only complaint is that chapter 3 doesn’t really need to be in the book (H is with other women as a patching in present). Aside from that chapter, that could easily be skipped and not miss anything, this book is one of my absolute favorites.