Author of Virtue and Vice and The Mischievous Mrs. Maxfield
I started writing when I didn't like the way some of my Sweet Valley books ended. I rewrote them. Before I knew it, I was writing my own stories, handing them out to my friends in class. They were written on spiral notebooks with a sturdy pencil. I still have most of them to this day.
While I enjoy many books, I write romance. Currently, I'm writing New Adult romance. I write highly-opinionated but often innocent heroines who face off infuriating but irresistible alpha males. They might be sometimes sprinkled with a touch of a fairy tale.
It was brutal and real and oh my god I couldn't breathe at times and I knew it was going to hurt and it did. It was a roller coaster of emotions and I didn't expect it to be that harsh but captivating. The characters and the depth and the development was immaculate.
I'm still reeling from the angst and I'm kind of mad that there wasn't that much groveling from the man. Well there was I think but not as much as I wanted. Also I got why because he was always there holding his heart and hand out and now it was her turn even though I'm not used to it. The female being the one to grovel.
But Stellan doing that with Lily and not telling the truth was not a good thing. The angst and groveling from the man was what I wanted there. Kady is broken but beautiful and they are explosive together. I don't know why she didn't tell him about the plane ticket before everything went down with her mom. I think that was what it was. I'm not sure now.
But other than that loved the time skips and the whole story. Stellan and Kady should have been together from the beginning but I liked the journey they went on discovering themselves and then getting their HEA after a lot of ups and downs.
Intense intense intense. Kept me on my toes. Took me on a roller coaster ride. Broke my heart a couple of time. But it was all worth it.
It was a magnificent read. I love the character development of Kady. I’ve reread previous books in this series so many times but I don’t think I’ll be able to reread this one. It will hurt too much. Great books tend to do that to you.