Wishing Lake by Regina Hart
I wish this story has been less contrived, less clichéd.
I wish this story has been less contrived, less clichéd.
A billionaire can’t figure out how he’d make a woman happy, so he hurts her non-stop to avoid hurting her. Makes sense.
One’s a clingy baby, one’s a go-getter player. Guess which one is the hero. (Hint: the cry baby.)
The heroine is great, but the rest of the story is either okay or cracked.
At last! Stephanie finally makes a decision and picks one guy while she accidentally roasts the other to death. Kidding!
So, what’s a Mills & Boon written in 1978 like? Do you really want to know?
It’s both a fun trashy read and a manual on how cheating married men behave and think.
This is less of a self-fulfillment fantasy, more of a “read this many times before” small town yarn.
Finally Ryuu and Hiro have a chance at a happily ever after, but it’s kinda dull to follow them there.
This is as romantic as that song by John Legend… no, just kidding.