
Please be aware that the sidebar in 'old' Reddit is no longer being updated with informative links about Book Clubs, AMAs, etc. Home of the magic search button and endless book recommendations as well as discussions about tropes and characters, Author AMAs, book clubs, and more. It’s a light read, some might call it emotional (I certainly do) but it also is really funny.R/RomanceBooks is a discussion sub for readers of romance novels. For example, Daisy (from Someone Like You) is one of Taylor’s best friends as well as Brit. There’s a twist that I really wasn’t expecting and that made the book a whole lot better.įor those who read the rest of the series, some of the other characters appear in this book. Surprisingly, the end is not predictable. They actually move in together almost a year after they met but, make no mistake, the book is not boring until that happens. It’s not that Bradley was a bad person (at least until some point I thought he wasn’t), but he was keeping them from being together. Another thing that I loved about Nick was the fact that he hated Bradley because, obviously, I hated him too. Besides that, he’s obviously hot and also charming, easygoing and pretty straightforward when it comes to his intentions. And on that note, Lauren was remarkable because I was really feeling Taylor’s pain. It was actually heartbreaking to see the way she genuinely thought that no one could love her. She’s also funny, mostly sarcastic, but funny nonetheless. Taylor turns that vulnerable side of her into a fake confidence which makes her a fiery person. Guess Nick Ballantile, freelancer writer at Oxford would be a good fit, right? Never mind the fact that they’re constantly at each other’s throats! As long as they don’t go taking off each other’s clothes… Now, sorrows aside, she’s in need of a roommate. But this Bradley guy thought it was a good idea to dump her exactly on the day that they were supposed to move in together. She just nailed a job at Oxford magazine and she also got the perfect man to go along with it, Bradley Calloway. Not her aunt and certainly not her mother who abandoned her when she was two. But the only thing she got out of that lesson was that nobody loved her. Taylor Carr is a tough one: love is not something she would recognize even if it slapped her in the face after being raised by her also tough aunt who taught her that love only makes us weaker.
