What I Love about You, by Rachel Gibson
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What I Love about You, by Rachel Gibson
Ebook PDF What I Love about You, by Rachel Gibson
Ex-high school cheerleader Natalie Cooper could once shake her pom-poms with the best of them. But she's paid for all that popularity -- her husband's run off with what's left of their money and a twenty-year-old bimbo named Tiffany. He's left Natalie to manage a photo store and to see to some pictures she, well, really shouldn't.
What I Love about You, by Rachel Gibson- Amazon Sales Rank: #5753390 in Books
- Brand: Gibson, Rachel
- Published on: 2015-06-01
- Format: Large Print
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.50" h x 1.20" w x 5.60" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Library Binding
- 500 pages
Review "Hot ... sinfully hot!" Dearauthor.com "A cute story" Heat
About the Author Rachel Gibson lives in Idaho with her husband, three kids, two cats, and a dog of mysterious origin. She began her fiction career at age sixteen, when she ran her car into the side of a hill, retrieved the bumper, and drove to a parking lot, where she strategically scattered the car's broken glass all about. She told her parents she'd been the victim of a hit-and-run and they believed her. She's been making up stories ever since, although she gets paid better for them nowadays.
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Most helpful customer reviews
31 of 32 people found the following review helpful. Too similar to previous Gibson books By travelingirl Ms. Gibson is revisiting the same themes, storyline and sometime sentences from her previous books. It would be nice to read something original from her instead of having scenes be virtually rewritten from years gone by. When you read a sentence with dialogue and can remember the exact scene from another of the author's book where it played out before, you're either too familiar with the author or they've hit the creativity wall. I've read everything except the last book Ms. Gibson has written and this book was another in a line of unfortunate disappointments of the past couple of years.
41 of 46 people found the following review helpful. What I Didn't Love About You By okeydokie ***Spoilers*** Rachel Gibson had me with the first couple of pages. Blake's struggle with the bottle of Johnnie Walker captured my interest. Then the cute little neighbor girl, Charlotte, came to visit (she was the best part of the book, by the way). I really could not reconcile the man who is supposed to be the hero of the book with the man who spoke so crudely to a 5 year old child. Sorry, but I didn't like Blake nor did I like his on again, off again treatment of Natalie. She also had her problems. Spending 5 years without a relationship so she could protect her child from heartbreak, she completely reversed her standards with Blake. They had unprotected sex in the living room with her daughter (hopefully) asleep in the adjoining bedroom. So much for discretion! As the book progressed, there were hints that Natalie might be pregnant but that was left hanging at the end of the book. There was an exhusband who showed up but his relationship with Natalie and Charlotte was left hanging. We did not find out if he was reformed or still a jerk. Blake had a twin brother who showed up but that relationship was left hanging, also. Suddenly with not much explanation, Blake finally decided he was in love with Natalie and she fell into his arms with no qualms about his being an alcoholic and suffering from PTSD and anger issues.There were editing problems everywhere. Blake went to the grocery store and put a bag of oranges in his cart. Two pages later, he put a bag of oranges in his cart. Reference was made repeatedly about Blake's "cold gray eyes". The language used is very rough. And last but not least, my own personal dislike: Several books earlier, Ms. Gibson started referring to her heroes' private parts as their "package". As in "Natalie couldn't help herself and looked down at Blake's package". I'm sorry but that's like nails on a chalk board to me. I wish she would find another euphemism. Some of Ms Gibson's books are on my "keeper" shelves. I preordered this book. I won't do it ever again. I will also be reading reviews before I buy in the future.
27 of 31 people found the following review helpful. funny books with well developed characters whose antics made you ... By Georgia V Rachel Gibson used to write clever, funny books with well developed characters whose antics made you laugh out loud. Unfortunately, she, too, has followed the trend of filling pages and pages of a novel with graphic sexual descriptions. I love her earlier books. This one has poorly developed, improbable characters, doing really impossible things. What a disappointment. No more Rachel Gibson books for me. Her creative well is dry.
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