Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Fiesty by Julia Kent Review




Title: Feisty
Author: Julia Kent
Genre: Romantic Comedy/Contemporary Romance
Audiobook Narrator: Erin Mallon
Release Date: January 28, 2020



Blurb

AN ALL-NEW STANDALONE FROM NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR JULIA KENT

I’m not too proud to admit that finding Mr. Right involves swiping right. Right? Welcome to dating in avocado toastland.

Here I am, on my first blind date, ever, courtesy of a smartphone app and my two annoying best friends.

So what is Chris “Fletch” Fletcher doing, walking across the room, looking at his phone like he’s pattern matching a picture to find a real person he’s never met before?

Oh.

Oh, no.

The guy I drop-kicked in seventh grade cannot be my blind date. The guy who earned me this infernal nickname.

That’s right.

Feisty.

More from New York Times bestselling author Julia Kent as Fiona “Feisty” Gaskill gets her chance at love - drop-kick included.


UGHHHH!!!!! I fell in love with Fiona and Fletch. First of all, I identify with Fiona on like 17 different levels. So, some parts of her I can see as annoying but its probably just things I find annoying in myself. 
I will be honest I was afraid that the reason she drop kicked Fletch in the 7th grade was gonna turn me off to him. It wasn't so bad, we can breathe. 
Fletch as a whole was missing something for me. I'm not 100% sure what it was, but I wanted more... which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Thats the only thing that kept this from being 5 feathers for me. 
If you like a quirky, heartfelt love story filled with anxiety and sweet romance you'll love this. 
If you're looking for a book heavy on the sexy details, this isn't that but its still pretty hot. 

Definitely recommend. 









Purchase Links

AMAZON US / UK / CA / AU
B&N / KOBO / APPLE BOOKS
GOOGLE PLAY / AUDIBLE
PAPERBACK





Excerpt

“Fletch,” I start, walking into my office, waving him on. As we pass by the children, they snicker and whisper, the girls more stirred up than the boys. We reach the office, I close the door, and ask, “Why are you here?”

“I came to see you because I knew this was your lunch break and you've been ignoring my texts and calls.”

“Maybe I need some space.”

“I respect that.”

“Clearly, you don't.”

“Look, Fiona, I'm not here to argue with you. Or to crowd you or upset you. The opposite, actually. I realized our wires have been crossed and it was better to just come to you, face to face, and say what needs to be said.”

“You couldn't wait until I wasn't working?”

“If you'd answer my texts and calls, I could.”

“Fair enough. What do you want to say? What needs to be said?”

“I would like to ask you out on a date.”

No comments:

Post a Comment