A review by mccorbin
Broken At Love: Whitman University by Lyla Payne

2.0

I think I could have liked this book more if Quinn hadn’t been the king of all kings A-hole. Now I want you to know that I love a man with some snarky-ness in his attitude but Quinn took it to a whole new level, a level that I really disliked. Quinn didn’t even possess that alpha male mentality that might have made me forgive him for the entire jerk like things that he did on a day-to-day bases. He would reel Emilie in, capture her heart, and then throw her back multiple times throughout this book; when was this girl going to learn? Now granted, he did do this with other girls but he only broke them once. He continuously did ripped Emilie apart thinking that she could find someone better suited for her than himself (okay, kind of noble but the way he did it was too harsh.)

“Broken At Love” had some great character inner self-torment that kept me reading because I wanted to see that moment when the characters changed and how it was going to affect them. A tortured soul is a weakness I have for books.

I do believe that I could have liked the plot better if Quinn’s character was toned down a little. I know that he needed to be jerky but 99% of the time I felt that Emilie was just too good for his character.