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A review by musicflowergirl
Breaking All The Rules by Amy Andrews
4.0
4 ⭐
In this small town romance we meet Beatrice Asher (Bea for short) just after she got passed by for another promotion and decided to say ‘bye bye’ to LA advertising. Now she moved to Credence (Colorado) doing only what she wants and that is binge-watching 15 seasons of Supernatural in sweats, wrong day-of-the-week panties, messy hair and bunny slippers.
When she leaves her apartment after 2weeks on the hunt for pie, the locals call the cops .. introducing officer Austin Cooper (10 years her junior).
Bea wants to go against the conventional and break all the rules, which lands her for a short time in jail for jay-walking. But officer Cooper was rather taken by Bea, and soon he’s helping her thick off things on her ‘breaking the rules’ list. From horse riding to line dancing and skinny dipping, Austin knows exactly what Bea needs to boost her confidence.
The book is written in a third person perspective with a double POV.
While I am not a big fan of the third person narrative, I really didn’t mind because the writing flows well and you still get quite some inside on the characters.
I loved Bea and her FU attitude leading her to discover what’s important for her. Especially when her mantra was WWDD, a.k.a ‘What Would Dean Do’, since you can never go wrong with some Dean Winchester in my book
In this small town romance we meet Beatrice Asher (Bea for short) just after she got passed by for another promotion and decided to say ‘bye bye’ to LA advertising. Now she moved to Credence (Colorado) doing only what she wants and that is binge-watching 15 seasons of Supernatural in sweats, wrong day-of-the-week panties, messy hair and bunny slippers.
When she leaves her apartment after 2weeks on the hunt for pie, the locals call the cops .. introducing officer Austin Cooper (10 years her junior).
Bea wants to go against the conventional and break all the rules, which lands her for a short time in jail for jay-walking. But officer Cooper was rather taken by Bea, and soon he’s helping her thick off things on her ‘breaking the rules’ list. From horse riding to line dancing and skinny dipping, Austin knows exactly what Bea needs to boost her confidence.
The book is written in a third person perspective with a double POV.
While I am not a big fan of the third person narrative, I really didn’t mind because the writing flows well and you still get quite some inside on the characters.
I loved Bea and her FU attitude leading her to discover what’s important for her. Especially when her mantra was WWDD, a.k.a ‘What Would Dean Do’, since you can never go wrong with some Dean Winchester in my book