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Isn't She Lovely (Redemption Book 1) Kindle Edition

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,874 ratings

The rules are clear—until they’re broken. The first book in Lauren Layne’s Redemption series gives a classic love story its edgiest twist yet.

“Who knew that pretending you’re not falling for someone would be so much more difficult than pretending that you are?”

Stephanie Kendrick gave up her whole summer to ace her NYU film school screenwriting course, so she’s pissed to be stuck with a preppy, spoiled frat boy as her writing partner. Then again, with her piercings, black-rimmed eyes, and Goth wardrobe, Stephanie isn’t exactly Ethan Price’s type, either. He’s probably got his eye on some leggy blonde with a trust fund . . . or does he?

As the summer scene kicks off in the Hamptons, Ethan is desperate to make his snobbish mother forget the pedigreed girl who broke his heart. While Stephanie’s a stretch as a decoy, the right makeover and a pastel cardigan just might do the trick. She may not love the idea of playing Ethan’s brainless Barbie girlfriend, but the free rent and luxurious digs make a tempting offer. So does the promise of a ready-made screenplay idea inspired by their charade.

But when Stephanie steps into Ethan’s privileged world, the “acting” begins to feel all too real. The kissing and touching that were intended to fool the Hamptons crowd wind up manipulating
them. And Stephanie faces a question she’s too afraid to ask: Is Ethan falling for the real her or for the dolled-up princess he wants to see?

Praise for
Isn’t She Lovely

“Fresh and authentic, Lauren Layne’s
Isn’t She Lovely packs intelligence, wit, and an addictive romance into one fantastic read! I loved the bold characters, the slow-building yet steamy romance, and the raw and painful edge of self-discovery. I couldn’t put it down!”New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Cora Carmack

Lauren Layne’s New York Times bestselling Oxford Novel series can be read in any order:
IRRESISTIBLY YOURS
I WISH YOU WERE MINE
SOMEONE LIKE YOU
I KNEW YOU WERE TROUBLE
I THINK I LOVE YOU

Don’t miss any of Lauren Layne’s hot reads:

The Love Unexpectedly series: 
BLURRED LINES | GOOD GIRL | LOVE STORY | WALK OF SHAME | AN EX FOR CHRISTMAS

The Sex, Love & Stiletto series: 
AFTER THE KISS | LOVE THE ONE YOU’RE WITH | JUST ONE NIGHT | THE TROUBLE WITH LOVE

The Redemption series: 
ISN’T SHE LOVELY  | BROKEN | CRUSHED

The I Do, I Don’t series: 
READY TO RUN | RUNAWAY GROOM
Read more Read less
All 3 for you in this series See full series
See included books
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Fresh and authentic, Lauren Layne’s Isn’t She Lovely packs intelligence, wit, and an addictive romance into one fantastic read! I loved the bold characters, the slow-building yet steamy romance, and the raw and painful edge of self-discovery. I couldn’t put it down!”New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Cora Carmack

“A fresh new voice in the New Adult genre . . . I loved this book! Such a fun read from start to finish. You won’t want to put it down!”
New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Jen McLaughlin

Isn’t She Lovely is full of complex characters you want to root for—and a hero that will make you swoon.”New York Times bestselling author Monica Murphy

“These two characters have chemistry, and the readers can feel it.”
The Romance Reviews

“[The] perfect combination of irreverent and serious . . . I adored this book.”
Penny Dreadful Book Reviews

“I really enjoyed going along for the ride on this one. So glad I took a chance on it!”
Examiner.com

“If you’re looking to escape with a quick and entertaining New Adult contemporary romance with real romance, humor, a touch of angst, a strong girl and a totally swoony guy, this is the book for you.”
Kimberly Faye Reads

“Perfect, and a satisfying ending.”
Jeannie Zelos Book Reviews

“The author does a great job with the book. I recommend this to any fans of New Adult, romance or just a great book.”
Racing to Read

“Amazing, fun . . . [a] great book.”
For My Love of Books

“Sweet, light, and tons of fun,
Isn’t She Lovely was a brilliant New Adult read! The romance was sweet, the story was tons of fun, and I completely adored this book.”Imagine a World

“This romance was filled with lusty moments of intense attraction, accidentally-on-purpose kisses, and ogling galore! Yum! There were also so many sweet moments between these two, that I couldn’t help but
oooh and aww in some scenes.”The Reader’s Den

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

My mom always used to tell me that I wouldn’t really know myself until I turned thirty. I’m pretty sure that’s crap.
I’m twenty-one, and I already have a pretty good list of things I know about myself. The smell of roses makes me nauseous, I look sallow in green, small talk makes me queasy, and I’ve got a thing for old movies.

Oh, and I hate being late.

But it must be some sort of cosmic requirement that on the first day of a new semester you’ll sleep through your alarm, misplace your backpack, and naturally the subway will be running way behind schedule.

Not that being late to my Classic Film Narratives class is something to get worked up about, since it’s just an elective, but it’s like I said: I hate being late.

On the plus side, I’ve been at NYU for three years now and know my way around campus. At least I’m not lost, on top of having to do that awkward boob-jiggling half-run/half-walk thing as I make my way toward the classroom.

I’m digging around in my ancient black backpack for a granola bar since I skipped breakfast when I run smack into a wall of, well . . . beefcake, for a lack of a better word.

I’ve never done the whole round-the-corner-run-into-someone thing, but I always imagined it happening kind of slo-mo.

It doesn’t.

It’s more of a split-second flash of surprise and teeth-jolting discomfort followed by stinging humiliation.

I don’t know what’s worse, the fact that my shit’s now all over the ground or the fact that I’m gaping at the guy I just slammed into. He’s obnoxiously good-looking in a clean-cut, star-quarterback kind of way. Dark blond hair, strong chin, golden brown eyes, and yummy shoulders . . .

Totally not my type. I prefer the wiry artist type with soulful eyes. But still, he’s pretty if you like ’em tall, muscly, and hair-gelled.

Instead of apologizing like a good little plastic doll, he lets out the smallest of sighs, like he’s the one inconvenienced, even though he’s not the one who has tampons and notebooks scattered all over the floor.

“Awesome,” I mutter, bending down to pick up the mess.

He leans down at the same moment and I jerk my head back to avoid bumping skulls like in a B-movie scene. Unfortunately, my movement causes my chest to thrust up toward his face, and we both leap back just in time to avoid him face-planting into my boobs. Basically I just replaced a slightly awkward moment with the motherlode of awkwardness. Could this day get any better?

“Sorry ’bout that,” Pretty Boy says with a crooked grin. I don’t know whether he’s apologizing for our initial collision or for the humiliating near-miss of an inadvertent motorboat situation. Since he looks like he’s ready to bust out laughing, I’m pretty sure it’s the latter.

A-hole.

I keep my eyes locked on the mess of books and papers, because my face feels like it’s on fire. Of course I had to go with a skimpy tank top today. I’m not usually one to show a lot of skin, but it’s blazing hot, with the humidity at like 400 percent, and my usual collection of dark T-shirts seemed oppressive.

This is what I get for being practical.

The guy starts to help me gather my stuff, and I discreetly study him. His crisp white polo shirt and wrinkle-free plaid shorts are majorly out of place in the Tisch School of the Arts. Most of the students in my program look more like me: dark hair, dark clothes, three more swipes of eyeliner than necessary.

My eyes lock on his espresso-colored messenger bag, where there’s a discreet Prada logo.

“Are you lost or something?” I blurt out.

The guy gives a little laugh. “Just because I don’t come barreling around corners doesn’t mean I’m lost.”

“I wasn’t barreling,” I snap. “I’m just in a hurry.”

He picks up a tampon and hands it to me with an innocent smile. I try to look unfazed as I grab it and stuff it into the bottom of my bag. Really, of all the things to pick up, he goes for that one?

I snatch up the rest of my things and jam them into the bag, standing as I yank the zipper closed. “Whatever. I just thought I could point you in the right direction.”

“I’ll be a senior starting in September. I know my way around the campus,” he says, standing to tower over me.
“A senior here?” I gape. “Because you look like you walked off a Harvard admissions brochure.”

He raises an eyebrow that’s a couple of shades darker than his blond hair. “Stereotype much?”

I don’t even know why I’m engaging in an argument with the guy, but there’s something smug about him, and all that tidy perfection bugs the crap out of me. I prefer my dudes real, and this one isn’t.

I sort of wave my hand up and down in his direction. “It’s just that I think you forgot to change out of your country-club uniform.”

He takes a tiny step closer to me, and I try to ignore the fact that he’s about a foot taller than me and has a perfect view down my shirt.

“Does the surly mood come with the goth outfit?” he asks, giving me a once-over. “Or do you have to buy it separately?”

I hold up a hand to shield my eyes. “Could you please watch where you’re pointing your teeth? The glare from your caps is hurting my eyes.”

He runs a tongue over his ridiculously white teeth, looking thoughtful. “You know, sometimes if I don’t have enough light to study by, I just smile and use the reflection from these pearly whites.”

It’s a lame comeback, but I roll my eyes and let him win the sparring contest. I’m over this ridiculous conversation, and I head toward my classroom, well aware that I’m now a full twenty minutes late.

“You’re not even going to say good-bye?” he calls after me. “I picked up your tampon!”

I give a dismissive flick of my hand over my head, not bothering to turn around.

I quickly find my classroom and brace myself for that awkward late-girl moment. The room is overly full considering that this is a summer elective course, but then I guess that’s to be expected when the professor has two Golden Globes and an Oscar under his belt.

And actually, the professor isn’t a professor at all, but the current darling of Hollywood screenwriting. Martin Holbrook graduated from NYU’s Tisch School like a hundred years ago, and he guest-lectures at his alma mater every now and then to throw some wisdom at the undergraduates.

Of course, this class isn’t my only reason for sticking around New York this summer. Hell, it’s not even my primary reason.

But it’s still pretty freaking cool to work with a guy who’s done the red carpet and all that. Most of my professors’ experience is limited to behind-the-camera indie stuff.

“Ms. Kendrick, I presume?” Martin Holbrook says as I try to slink unobtrusively along the side.

“Um, yeah,” I say as I slide into the first empty seat against the wall. “Sorry I’m late.”

But to my surprise, Mr. Holbrook doesn’t seem fazed by my late arrival. Neither am I getting the usual collegiate-judgment stare from my classmates.

Instead, they’re all staring at the toothpaste commercial standing in the doorway.

Oh, good God. I think for sure we’re dealing with a wrong-room scenario.

“Ethan, it’s good to see you again,” Martin Holbrook is saying.

Wait. What? What does Holbrook mean, again?

Instead of skulking along the wall like I did, Ethan ambles easily toward the empty row of desks where I’m sitting, looking completely unperturbed by the fact that everyone is staring at him.

I glare at him in a way that I hope coaxes him to put a couple of desks between us. Instead, he lets his hip brush against the edge of my desk, tossing my smashed granola bar on my lap as he passes.

“You dropped this,” he says with a wink.

Everyone is staring at us in confusion, and I don’t blame them. I look like the troubled girl parents warn their kids away from, and Ethan looks like the homecoming king. In no ecosystem should we even be acknowledging each other’s existence.

And yet we both came in late, practically together, and now he’s being all winky and you-dropped-this, making it seem like we actually know each other.

Horror.

I catch the eye of Carrie Sinders, one of my closest friends at school, and she widens her eyes dramatically, as if to ask, What’s going on?

Good question, Carrie. Good freaking question.

The only good thing about the whole situation is that Martin Holbrook isn’t the prima donna I was fearing and doesn’t seem at all annoyed by the interruption. Probably because he played lacrosse with Pretty Boy Prada’s dad or something.

I pull out my notebook and a pen and try to focus on what Holbrook is saying when I feel a poke between my shoulder blades.

“Hey, Morticia, can I borrow a pen?”

I start to tell Ethan that I don’t have one, but of course he knows firsthand that I have about ten in my bag. I dig out a blue ballpoint and drop it onto his desk without looking at him. I don’t like people I can’t figure out, and his very presence in a place where he doesn’t seem to belong is unsettling.

That, and he smells good. Really good. Normally I hate dudes with cologne. But this is clean and sexy and smells kind of like summer in the Hamptons, and it’s more than a little distracting.

I shake it off and remind myself that I’m avoiding the male population in general since David. David, whose idea of cologne is deodorant.

“So everyone’s good?” Holbrook says. I panic a little because I haven’t been paying attention at all, and instead of there being notes to copy down, Holbrook has just written on the board a link to a website. I hurriedly scribble it in my notebook.

Luckily, there’s a total stoner in the back row who’s apparently as clueless as me, because he raises his hand in confusion. “Wait, so like . . . we just go online, pick out one of these common film narratives, and then write a screenplay based on one?”

Holbrook nods. “Pretty much. I’ll be here Tuesdays and Thursdays during the scheduled course time if you have questions or want to run something by me.”

I frown. Wait—we don’t actually have to come to class?

Normally this kind of freedom would be right up my alley, but I’ve kind of been counting on this course to keep me busy this summer. In previous summers I was able to stay on campus as long as I took a certain number of credits, but this year they’re repainting all the dorms, so on-campus housing isn’t available. Instead I’ll be subletting my cousin’s shoe-box-sized apartment in Queens, and I’m not sure she has Internet, much less air-conditioning. What am I going to do all summer?

Still . . . anything beats going home.

“Okay, unless there are more questions, I’ll connect you guys with your partners and you can be on your way.”

It takes my brain a second to absorb that.

Partners?

I am not a group project kind of girl.

“I had my four-year-old daughter draw names out of a cereal bowl last night, so this is as random as it gets,” Martin was saying, pulling a small notebook out of his bag. “Aaron Billings? You’re with Kaitlin Shirr. Michael Pelinski, you’re with Taylor McCaid . . .”

The list goes on, and Carrie looks at me, holding up crossed fingers.

Oh, please, God, let me be with Carrie. I can tolerate that. Mostly.

“Stephanie Kendrick . . .”

Oh, please, oh, please . . .

“ . . . you’re with Ethan Price.”

My mind goes temporarily blank. Film students are a pretty tight-knit group, and I thought I knew everyone in the class.

Everyone except . . .

Oh, God.

Pretty Boy must have put the pieces together too, because I feel another sharp poke between my shoulder blades.

“You hear that, Goth? Partners!”

I close my eyes. This can’t be happening.

Instead of the carefree, find-myself summer I envisioned, I’ll be spending the next three months with my own life-sized Ken doll.

And that isn’t even the worst of it.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00CNQ7BG0
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Flirt (October 28, 2013)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 28, 2013
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2731 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 231 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,874 ratings

About the author

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Lauren Layne
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“Escapist and aspirational, [with] sparkling dialog and deeply emotional moments.” —Publishers Weekly

“[A] powerhouse romance Author.” —PopSugar

Featured in Oprah Magazine and PopSugar, Lauren Layne books have sold millions of copies worldwide. Snappy banter, sexual tension, and a fairy-tale happy ending are a hallmark of the Lauren Layne brand. Library Journal has described Lauren's work as "exceptional," and the books have been described by USA TODAY as "romantic comedy at its finest."

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
1,874 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2014
4.5 stars

The premise is one dating back through literature and film history. Guy tries to tranform girl (much different from him) for a ruse and ends up falling for her. You’ve read it. I’ve read it. And Ethan Price and Stephanie Kendrick have seen it and read it. And it’s why they are using it for the plot of their film class screenplay as well as to work out the chemistry between them, whether they realize that or not.

Yep, Isn’t She Lovely is a modern new adult spin on the Pygmalion story as well as the theme of looking past appearances and social classes and finding your true self. It’s cute; it’s funny; and it’s a sweet story that I couldn’t put down.

Ethan and Stephanie’s comical banter pulled me in right from the beginning. It certainly isn’t love at first sight for this mismatched pair. Ethan Price is a perfectly groomed, out-going, and privileged 21 year old college Frat boy with a penchant for Animal Planet references and who makes claims of endowment so large it’s lethal. (Oh that’s a hilarious scene!) Stephanie Kendrick is a reserved, anti-social 21 year old film student Goth girl in combat boots, lots of black, and a rack that Ethan can’t quit staring at.

They sound like stereotypes but really they are not. And that’s one of the many strengths of this novel—the characters are well developed right from the start and are much more layered than what they seem on the surface. And while based on a familiar premise the story avoids clichés with the supporting characters, as well, who don’t necessarily fall into their own stereotypical personas either.

Ethan and Stephanie are both harboring secrets, stuck on sour lingering memories, and nursing their wounds. But don’t misinterpret—overall the story is quite light-hearted and fun. Those elements about their background and families are what make you relate and feel for their characters and create an engaging story that keeps you turning pages to find out what really has made Stephanie withdrawn and what caused Ethan to seek a summer escape in the film department.

This one is light on the steam scenes but has no shortage of chemistry and sexual tensions. Soft touches never seemed so sexy and well described kisses never felt so hot and sweet.

Ethan is incredibly likeable. He’s funny, quick-witted, sweet, and even when he’s working through his own issues he has his head on pretty straight. He’s also has an adorable penchant for making memorable appearances at just the right time. Stephanie has some deeper stuff to work through and a few times I thought she let her teen angst lead her astray. The story is told via Ethan and Stephanie’s alternating first person point of view, and it works well for understanding what’s going through each of their heads and where they are romantically at all times.

Once Ethan and Stephanie lay out the plot of their screenplay, will they bring their story to life in an act to fool Ethan’s social circle into believing he has a new love of his life? Will their acting stop when they no longer have an audience? And what scenes will end up on the cutting room floor before their final draft is turned in?

If you are looking for a sweet, adorable, new adult read with a swoon-worthy male, some touching moments, and quite a few laughs, then Isn’t She Lovely is definitely one to spend an afternoon getting lost in.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2015
This was a really good and enjoyable book. It is a modern take of the Pygmalion story that has been done countless times but it points this out in the book and lists many of the movies that have used it. Stephanie Kendrick is at NYU in the film school. She wears mostly black clothing - Goth style, combat boots, has multiple piercings, and wears black-rimmed eye shadow and liner. She stays in New York City during the summer to take a screenwriting class and to keep her from having to go visit her father and her stepmother in North Carolina. Ethan Price is from a very rich family and he is a business major at NYU. He takes the screenwriting class to keep from having to intern at his father's corporation. He is in a fraternity, wears very preppy clothing, and usually goes for blondes. One thing that they both have in common is they were both cheated on by their prospective spouses. They are put together as partners to create a screenplay for their class. But then Ethan sees a way to keep his mother from trying to get him back together with Olivia and also to protect himself from feeling like a loser when he does come face to face with her. He asks Stephanie to play his girlfriend and help him out.

Stephanie has some pretty tragic circumstances in her past and she has been betrayed by people she trusted and cared about. Her mother dies the night of her high school graduation and she is betrayed that night by her boyfriend. Six months after her mother's death, her father remarries and that just makes her feel more lost and hurt. She used to be the popular and beautiful girl in high school but considering all that has happened to her has caused her to hide behind clothing and makeup. She had a boyfriend but she never allowed herself to be very forthcoming with him and she held herself back in many ways and he ended up cheating on her. She is a great girl but keeps most people at arms length or farther, acts certain ways, and makes her appearance so people can't or won't get too close. She's allowed the past and others to dictate too much of her life. She needs to realize her own inner self and strength.

Ethan was fine with his planned life that his family expect of him. He's supposed to work at his father's company and then one day take over. He was supposed to be with Olivia and they were supposed to get married and live happily ever after. He was with her for years and he was "happy" but then she cheated on him with his best friend. That experience and others have made him kind of realize that there is more to life than what he has experienced and been pushed into. He starts to question things and wonder if maybe there is more to life. He is hurt and questioning things and that makes him want to step back and get some insight. Ethan is a great guy who acts certain ways depending on the people and the situations. He understands that he lives his own charade like Stephanie but also like the characters in their script.

Definitely worth reading. I'm definitely interested in reading Olivia's story and Michael's story.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure Adorableness
Reviewed in Canada on December 19, 2017
The amount of times I see blatant misogyny, slut-shaming and blurred lines of consent in romance novels is just so disheartening. This book follows none of the generic character tropes. No bitchy ex and loose bff. No over the top characters. The story was cute, believable and heartwarming. Its about finding yourself, seeing things from a different perspective and forgiving. I loved it!
Lori
4.0 out of 5 stars Divertido clichê romântico...
Reviewed in Brazil on February 10, 2014
Stephanie é o estereótipo da garota gótica. Ela usa roupas pretas, calças largas e maquiagem carregada nos olhos. Para completar, ela parece estar sempre de mal humor. Já Ethan, por outro lado é atlético, popular, rico, mauricinho e bonachão. Enquanto, Stephanie gosta de filmes preto e branco, Ethan só quer saber dos blockbusters de ação. Maiores opostos seria impossível delinear. Mas, por dentro eles são bem parecidos. Ambos estão sofrendo com conflitos familiares e de traição.

Eles estudam na mesma faculdade mas frequentam círculos diferentes, até que Ethan decidir atender à um curso de verão de cinema ministrado por seu padrinho, um famoso screenplayer de Hollywood. O curso não é nada do que Stephanie antecipou, ao invés de ter aulas com o vencedor do Oscar, a turma é dividia em duplas que juntos deverão escrever um screenplay e somente então tirar suas dúvidas com o famoso professor. Stephanie, claro, cai com Ethan. Assim, ela se vê presa à um cara do qual ela não vai nem um pouco com a cara, como também com mais tempo livre do que ela gostaria de ter no quente verão de Nova York.

No início, Ethan e Stephanie realmente não se dão bem. E os insultos de um para o outro são hilários. Em uma de suas engraçadas brigas, Stephanie tem a idéia de escrever um script baseada na estória mitológica de Pygmalion, que se apaixonou por uma estátua de sua criação. Ela sugere adaptar a moral desta estória para uma realidade atual, a exemplo do famoso filme Um Linda Mulher aonde o personagem de Richard Gere transforma uma mulher de programa em uma Lady, mas, com um cenário de fundo universitário.

Ethan, cansado de ver a sua mãe tentar reconciliá-lo com a sua ex-namorada, resolve unir o útil ao agradável e propõe a Stephanie que eles baseiem a proposta da trama de Pygmalion na vida real. Nesse sentido, Stephanie fingiria ser sua namorada durante o verão, mas para tanto ela teria que passar por um make-over completo e se transformar de gótica rebelde para uma doce menina de família.

Stephanie concorda em fingir que ela é uma menina amável, que pertence ao mundo de Ethan. Mas quanto mais eles fingem que seu relacionamento é real, mais a tênue linha que divide o real do fictício se mistura. A atração entre eles começa a crescer e aflorar. Mas, quando você se transforma em outra pessoa, como você sabe se ele a ama de verdade, ou se na verdade quem ele ama é a sua criação? E esse é o fio condutor da trama.

Bem, se você está esperando um livro original e sem clichês, com uma inédita estória de amor. Este definitivamente não é o livro para você. Agora, se você é daqueles que adora um clichê romântico, então não deixe de lê-lo. É um leitura leve, doce e descomplicada.
Monica
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Reviewed in Italy on September 17, 2014
It is a love story between a Goth girl and a rich college student. They begin to known each other, pretending to be a couple for the boy's parents.
It si written very well and it is a funny, ironic reading.
Simson
5.0 out of 5 stars Herzklopfen und Lesezwang
Reviewed in Germany on July 2, 2014
Super geschrieben. Angehnem flüßig zu lesen. Die Story leicht vorhersehbar, entwikelt aber richtig Tiefe so das das eigene Herz schon mal mitfiebert. Ich konnte es kaum aus der Hand legen.
belle-lolita
5.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly good read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 5, 2014
I was especially uncertain about seeing this story through as the style of writing is more colloquial than I would have expected, however I decided to power on and get my £1.11 worth. And I am SO glad that I did! Once you slip into the modern way of speaking, which quite frankly we should all be used to be now, despite the story-line seeming a little cliche, it really is an amazing journey. It's the twists and turns that make both the characters who they are. They are polar opposites in so many ways but what really draws them together is that they are both "damaged goods" and hide behind masks for protection, Ethan with his money and Stephanie with her 'goth'-ness. But during this summer project it seems that they slowly snapped, thread by thread. They didn't want to be 'trapped' in their heads anymore. They wanted -needed -freedom, and the key to that freedom came in the form of a project; but how many exes and scandal can a relationship stand for? I guarantee you, you will laugh out loud, especially at the ending! It's worth the wait and the reading is so ... effortless. You breeze along, enraptured by the characters and their dilemmas. Amazing read!

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