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Finding It – Cora Carmack
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FINDING IT : Sometimes You Find Love Where You Least Expect It ………….

Cora Carmack
WELL USED, PAPERBACK

RM14.00

The Contemporary Romance Fiction For Third Book In The “Losing It” Series

Remarks Free Cover-Pages Wrapping
ISBN 9780091953409
Book Condition WELL USED
Format PAPERBACK
Publisher Ebury Publishing
Publication Date 10 Oct 2013
Pages 320
Weight 0.33 kg
Dimension 20 × 12.5 × 2.5 cm
Availability: 1 in stock

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1 in stock

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Description

★★ NEW YORK TIMES AND USA TODAY BESTSELLER ★★
 
Kelsey Summers is looking for love in all the wrong places…
 
Most girls would kill to spend months traveling around Europe after college graduation with no responsibility, no parents, and no-limit credit cards. Kelsey Summers is no exception. She’s having the time of her life . . . or that’s what she keeps telling herself.
 
Spending a few months travelling around Europe – with no parents, no responsibilities and a no limit credit card – Kelsey’s having the time of her life.
 
Kelsey is a spoiled rich girl who is traveling Europe to “find herself” before looking for a year after college, on her parents dime. She figures if she drinks enough she can drown out her problems, most especially her apathy toward becoming and adult and her sadness at how little her parents actually care for her.
 
But when she completely embarrasses herself in front of the hottest guy she’s ever seen, she soon realises there’s more to life than the next party.


What she doesn’t realise is that although she’s on a journey to find herself, she will end up finding The One…
 
It’s a lonely business trying to find out who you are, especially when you’re afraid you won’t like what you discover. No amount of drinking or dancing can chase away Kelsey’s loneliness, but maybe Jackson Hunt can.
 
After a few chance meetings, he convinces her to take a journey of adventure instead of alcohol. With each new city and experience, Kelsey’s mind becomes a little clearer and her heart a little less hers.
 
Jackson helps her unravel her own dreams and desires. But the more she learns about herself, the more Kelsey realizes how little she knows about Jackson. Kelsey is on a world wide trip. She is trying to find happiness one last time before she has to return to parents who don’t give a damn about her.
 
Kelsey was really hard to like in the beginning. I could not relate to her behavior or her getting drunk every five minutes. But I did understand her by the end of the book. She had a vulnerability to her and she just wanted to belong.
 
Then there’s Jackson Hunt. He always seems to end up when she needs someone to rescue her. There’s also the thing of him being too hot for his own good. Jackson somehow always seems to see through Kelsey’s pretense. I really liked Jackson. He was sensible and hot. He was what made the whole romance swoon worthy.
 
She meets Jackson Hunt at a club and can’t stop thinking about him, but she doesn’t want to get tangled up with someone. Until she runs into him again in another city. Then it seems like fate wants them together. And who is she to fight fate?
 
As she wrestles with her demons, she struggles to keep Jackson out. As fun as it is to have a fling, letting someone see inside her isn’t in the cards. Until it’s too late and Jackson has seen the worst of her…and accepted what he saw. Turns out Jackson is damaged, too. Maybe they can help put each other back together. Until the truth about Jackson comes out. Then Kelsey realizes she knows almost nothing about him..and what she does know is just enough to break her heart.
 
Kelsey showed quite a bit of growth through the book. That aspect of the book worked quite well. She was shallow and focused on her own problems in the beginning. As the novel progressed she started exercising her demons and finding herself.
 
Though her journey wasn’t completed, she was well on her way to living her life for herself, not for her parents. While I enjoyed her personal journey, there were many times I had to suspend disbelief to accept her actions and various plot points.
 
The end was too abrupt for the angst leading up to it. An epilogue wouldn’t have been remiss. With the addition of an epilogue or a continuation of the story, this had great potential. As it stands, it was an okay read but not a great one.

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