When Jasmine opens her dance studio, she discovers, much to her dismay, she shares the building and parking space with Will, the orthodontist she's been fighting with all summer at the community theatre; he's too rigid, no fun - so why is she so attracted to him?
Will used to be easygoing, until he caused the accident which crippled his brother, and had to live with that guilt ever since. Jasmine is too volatile, too outspoken, reminding him of is former life - so why is he so attracted to her?
I expected more of this book from the description on the cover, to be honest, so I was a bit disappointed by the way the story was told. An nice plot - opposites attract each other - which could have led to numerous explosive and funny situations, but did not. The story tried to be amusing, maybe too hard, because some of the interactions/events/situations seemed to be a bit forced, the characters reacting way out of the normal. Would an orthodontist, as the owner, really put up with a colleague in his employ who acts in such a contrary way to everything he believes in and lives by?
The characters themselves, especially the protagonists, were shallow in my opinion, even with that cloud of guilt over Will. And Jasmine's revelation? Came way too late, in the last third of the book, nearly close to the end. And I could not shake off the impression it was just put there as an afterthought to explain some of her reactions. The fights between Will and Jasmine were often caused by - yes by what? Never quite could put my finger on it, just one sentence or choice of word from one of them, and the other went off like a rocket? Must have been something deeper I could not understand.
I thought the protagonists acted as if they were children or teens playing at being grown-ups - their behaviour was downright juvenile in some instances. Not convincing, not realistic at all.
Overall, it was a nice story as such, but it could have been so much more, in my opinion.
I do not think I will continue this series.