The Truth About De Campo by Jennifer Hayward
Once the author decides to stop being the awkward little robot that spews faithful tropes, this story becomes much more readable.
Once the author decides to stop being the awkward little robot that spews faithful tropes, this story becomes much more readable.
Aside from the title, this book is exactly like every Harlequin Mills & Boon story that features a couple at the verge of divorce.
If you like paranoid women – and that’s before they get knocked up – then this one would be a good bet. Everyone else, there’s always Russian roulette.
Oh, the whole country went toes up and people died… but who cares? The drunkard prince has parent issues, HOW SAD.
Why is this vapid, childish thing marketed to anyone over the age of 15 again?
Unlike most books in this line, the heroine is the spectacularly toxic character here, not the hero. Imagine that.
There’s something sweet and lovely happening here.
The secrets are TERRIBLE and we should all be ashamed for wanting to know them.
I wonder what the inspiration of this one is…
The poor heroine, she never had any choice but to marry the hero.