![]() ![]() Rebel Heir is centered around Rush and Gia. I can follow every literary criticism with a point that went well, yet that doesn’t negate the fact that there is a plethora of those critiques. I found more wrong with this than right but I still really enjoyed myself. That being said, it does end in a cliffhanger and I feel no push to read the second book. ![]() I kept reading and I couldn’t stop myself. I don’t know if it was because it was a slow burn romance or because it was humorous at times or even because I was stuck on a 5 and a half hour flight. ![]() However, beyond the cliches and the predictable plot lines lay a page-turner. In fact, it was the epitome of one – because I know for a fact if I read this again and sit down and think about it, I would list out a whole bunch of reasons why this book and me wouldn’t gel well. ![]() Now, although a lot of the tropes and the cliches in this book were done before – I do want to go ahead and start this by saying this was a massive guilty pleasure. That was a brief summary of what this book was like to read. Placed it on the kitchen counter top, stared at it and thought, “You are no good to me whatsoever, I have experienced your effects multiple times and have seen what you do to me.” Then, just when you’re about to close the box and outsmart that fucking pizza, you say damn it all to hell… and you stuff your “I deserve this” mouth. “You ever just look at someone and know that if you let them, they could turn your life upside down…completely ruin you?”Įver got yourself a massive pizza with stuffed crust and extra carbs on the side to go. ![]()
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