When we meet someone, we make judgements. These judgements can be based on our observations, our past experiences, our mood and many other things. Sometimes those judgements have some truth in them, but all too often they are way off the mark. Both Marco, a police officer, and Allie, an executive at a luxury resort, make snap judgements about each on the day they meet. When he sees her and reads her identification while giving her a speeding ticket, he thinks “rich, entitled and careless”, on the basis of a past traumatic experience... the car accident that killed his parents. Allie pegs Marco to be the “ hot, overly grouchy, way too personal” cop who took joy in giving her a ticket. Fate or chance keeps putting them together and her speeding ticket leads to community service at the soup kitchen he runs. It takes time, snarky banter and a few unexpected surprises for them both to realize that their snap first judgements were wrong. They have both suffered pain through the careless actions of others and they both have soft centres they try to hide. Her money doesn’t make her careless or entitled, and he is not after her money. Like the recipes in the cookbook given to Allie, they have to find the ingredients and ways to make a relationship between them work. The main ingredient is love, followed by trust and acceptance.
This book will evoke a lot of laughter, sighs and smiles. The characters are vivid and so very relatable that we are easily drawn into their story. I highly recommend this book. I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.