Hopeless (Chestnut Springs)

Hopeless (Chestnut Springs)

Taschenbuch
3.68

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Beschreibung

He doesn't believe that anyone holds her last name against her…so he offers her his.
Beau Eaton is the town prince, a handsome military hero with a tortured past. Bailey Jansen is the outcast bartender, a shy girl from the wrong side of the tracks. He's thirty-five and all man, and she's twenty-two and all…virgin.
He's also her fiancé. Correction: her fake fiancé.
It starts out as a bet, a point for Beau to prove. And it's a win-win: Beau gets a break from his concerned family's prying, and Bailey gets a chance to shed her family's reputation while she saves up to ditch this small town for good. All she has to do is wear his ring, follow his lead, and pretend she can't keep her hands off of him in public. Easy enough, right?
But it's what happens between them in private that blurs all those carefully drawn lines. It's what transpires behind closed doors that doesn't feel like pretending at all. This engagement was supposed to be for show. This agreement? It has an end date.
Beau once told Bailey he'd never fall in love. She's determined to make him change his mind.
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Taschenbuch
Seitenzahl
439
Preis
17.70 €

Beiträge

2
Alle
1

This was the worst book in general, not even the series Beau was not the same person in previous books. He was not interesting to read about, especially paired with an equally plain MFC, but she got on my last nerve She overshared every stray sexual thought (be as open as you want with your friends or family, but filter your thoughts if you’re talking to strangers. They should be aware you’re dragging them into a filthy conversation instead of being ambushed or, worse, getting sexually assaulted because you never know who you are talking to so openly. It’s not quirky or cute, just an annoying person to avoid. She is complaining about the town, but she is twenty-two, so she can leave and work as a bartender in any city. Be poor somewhere else. It's not rocket science I hated Elsie Silver for flipping the script for this book Previous books in the series just gushed nonstop about the ranch, making the town a paradise to escape from the city. With this book, the same haven suddenly became a judgmental little town filled with terrible people who would judge you simply for the family you belong to and openly insult you. It was too cartoonish to believe. Most importantly, There was no story, nothing but cliches stringed together But The bathtub scene

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