![]() ![]() You cannot help but come to adore Sawyer in this story. He learns what matters, and it takes him from the wreckage of his former relationship to a relationship with Fallon that feels abundant and life-giving instead of life-taking. His growth comes from living in a small town such as Canoodle and through a bit of mentorship by Sully, Fallon’s grandfather. He doesn’t just learn this through falling in love with Fallon. He moves from being a somewhat shallow spurned man to a man who finds his purpose. I love when writers remind us of the perils and twists of writing, and Quinn does this well in this book. It feels very Inception-esque if that had a place in the world of romance. As he and Fallon’s feelings develop for each other, he’s writing the things that you’re reading about him and Fallon and Sully and Joanne (Fallon’s grandparents). I mean, Sawyer is a screenwriter who needs to write a romance movie under his contract with a movie studio. ![]()
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