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Chloe Brown is a chronically ill computer geek with a goal, a plan, and a list. After almost—but not quite—dying, she’s come up with six directives to help her “Get a Life”, and she’s already completed the first: finally moving out of her glamourous family’s mansion. The next items? • Enjoy a drunken night out. • Ride a motorcycle. • Go camping. • Have meaningless but thoroughly enjoyable sex. • Travel the world with nothing but hand luggage. • And... do something bad. But it’s not easy being bad, even when you’ve written step-by-step guidelines on how to do it correctly. What Chloe needs is a teacher, and she knows just the man for the job. Redford ‘Red’ Morgan is a handyman with tattoos, a motorcycle, and more sex appeal than ten-thousand Hollywood heartthrobs. He’s also an artist who paints at night and hides his work in the light of day, which Chloe knows because she spies on him occasionally. Just the teeniest, tiniest bit. But when she enlists Red in her mission to rebel, she learns things about him that no spy session could teach her. Like why he clearly resents Chloe’s wealthy background. And why he never shows his art to anyone. And what really lies beneath his rough exterior…
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This was wonderful. I love these characters so much!!
4.5⭐️
This book is so cliche but so good.
CAN WE TALK ABOUT HOW REDFORD WENT TO THERAPY to fix himself and not demanding Chloe to fix him??!!! Aaarrghhhh!!!! Chloe also went out of her way to understand Redford the same way Redford did to Chloe. They both put effort into it and not the typical one-sides where guys put more.
I was really rooting for them 100% of the time. Truly enjoyed their dynamic. Their flirting were on point. Especially how both fix themselves on their own.
Both MC’s trauma experiences were built up well - not too repetitive, not underexplained- for the climax.
My only complain is (-0.5 ⭐️), we lack reasonings on how Redford find Chloe a strong person who didn’t need fixing. We only get it from his thoughts and not from a situation he’s seen her in. It feels forced; it was purposely repeated to convince reader that Redford feels that way.
Regardless, truly enjoy reading about another fictional man who treats women right.