This is a case of an author successfully crafting people who grow and improve instead of unrealistically transforming in a few brief days. Ben, meanwhile, hates the explosive anger that comes out of him in the kitchen, but can’t let go of his identity as a chef (even though his divorce agreement means he needs to wait another year to open a restaurant). May’s boyfriend’s botched proposal taught her that she had become an accessory without her own goals or preferences, a problem that began with her mother. A night of letting her crash on his couch becomes a weekend showing her the city, and suddenly he finds himself wanting to drive to Wisconsin with her – a place he was desperate to get out of.īoth May and Ben are at crossroads in their lives. Still, he’s trying to reinvent himself as a better person, and when he makes an effort, he finds himself unexpected connecting with May. Unfortunately, a mugger snatches the purse she walks away with, and with just $5, this Wisconsin girl’s last hope is to find a friendly face in a New York Packers bar to help her get home.Ī former chef with an anger management problem, Ben Hausman has a face that’s good-looking but definitely not friendly. After the world’s most disappointing marriage proposal, May Fredericks walks away from her NFL quarterback boyfriend (leaving her shrimp fork in the back of his non-passing hand). Ruthie Knox is my latest binge author, and her hot, honest contemporaries are consistent pleasers.
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