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emilyisoverbooked 's review for:
Love in Bloom
by Jenny Proctor, Jenny Proctor
“He mentions dinner one time and suddenly I surrender all my good sense to some primal need to—nope. Not going there. My ovaries are not in control. Not. In. Control. I am a strong and powerful woman that does not need a man to whisk me away and ride me into the sunset. Especially not this man."
Cameron and Darcy are rival tour guides in historic downtown Charleston. They can’t stand each other, but see each other all the time because their tours run along the same route. They’re up for the same magazine feature that could do wonders for either of their careers, so there’s no way they’ll be able to get along… or will they?
Jenny Proctor has such a way of writing the sweetest, most hysterical closed-door romance novels. Love in Bloom is the fourth novel in her Some Kind of Love series, but it can definitely be read as a standalone. I was cackling at the pranks that Cameron and Darcy were playing on each other, and I didn’t know that historic tour guides were the MCs that I needed in my romance read. They even get stuck in an 18th-century dungeon. I also LOVED the way Jenny wrote the typical getting-towards-the-end-of-the-book romance novel conflict. It was just smoothly a part of their relationship instead of something that didn’t fit in well or something that came out of left field, which has been happening in quite a few books I’ve read lately. This was such a fun book to read!
Read if you:
Cameron and Darcy are rival tour guides in historic downtown Charleston. They can’t stand each other, but see each other all the time because their tours run along the same route. They’re up for the same magazine feature that could do wonders for either of their careers, so there’s no way they’ll be able to get along… or will they?
Jenny Proctor has such a way of writing the sweetest, most hysterical closed-door romance novels. Love in Bloom is the fourth novel in her Some Kind of Love series, but it can definitely be read as a standalone. I was cackling at the pranks that Cameron and Darcy were playing on each other, and I didn’t know that historic tour guides were the MCs that I needed in my romance read. They even get stuck in an 18th-century dungeon. I also LOVED the way Jenny wrote the typical getting-towards-the-end-of-the-book romance novel conflict. It was just smoothly a part of their relationship instead of something that didn’t fit in well or something that came out of left field, which has been happening in quite a few books I’ve read lately. This was such a fun book to read!
Read if you: