Book Review: Christina Lauren’s Dating You / Hating You
It’s bad enough Carter and Evie are competing high-powered agents, but then their firms merge with their boss determined to sabotage Evie, and Carter caught in the middle.
It’s bad enough Carter and Evie are competing high-powered agents, but then their firms merge with their boss determined to sabotage Evie, and Carter caught in the middle.
Just when Mia thought she had the whole princess thing under control, things get out of hand, fast. An unexpected announcement from her mother. Grandmère arranges a national primetime interview. Then intriguing, exasperating letters from a secret admirer begin to arrive.
At a swanky rooftop restaurant in New York, a pair of husband-and-wife sleuths must find out who spiked a woman’s drink with murder.
Rebelling against her billionaire father, Carina Jurgensen is cut off after leaking a story about his business. So she fibs her way into a job only to find they expect her to use her connections.
Lizzie and her two best friends juggle normal high school events, glamorous family functions, as they discover the pitfalls of fame and the importance of friendship.
Round Robin reunites readers with the Elm Creek Quilters in this poignant and heartwarming follow-up to The Quilter’s Apprentice, Jennifer Chiaverini’s acclaimed debut novel. “She chose green and blue for the colors of Elm Creek Manor. She chose blue for truth and green for new beginnings . . .”
I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Girls’ Poker Nightby Jill A. Davis chick lit that was published by Ballantine Books on February 3, 2004 and has 256 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon A standalone chick lit romance. My TakeThe focus here is on the wanna-don’wanna relationship with her editor, Michael. I almost stopped reading so many times in this book but, because I’m obsessive, I kept going hoping for something redeeming about it. I was right . . . thank god! About the last few chapters . . . well, not really chapters per se, more like entries in a journal . . . Ruby finally, for some reason, gets her act together and writes a very illuminating column. It is good. It made me wish that Davis had produced other columns. I did enjoy the alternative betting the girls indulged in; it was much more of a challenge to cough it up when your thoughts and feelings are on the line. Escaping an unwanted relationship in Boston, Ruby Capote takes a job as a columnist in New […]