Genres: Contemporary, Contemporary Women, Fiction, General, Romance
Published by Simon and Schuster Publication Date: June 9th 2015
Pages: 448
Buy on Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Bookshop.org
Find on: Goodreads
Orange Is the New Black meets Jennifer Probstβs New York Times bestselling Marriage to a Billionaire trilogy, featuring a strong-minded prison tutor who discovers that her sexy bad-boy student is far more than he appears to be.Haunted by nightmares of her fatherβs street murder fifteen years ago, Kat Lane decides to face her fears and uphold his legacy of helping others by teaching inmates at a New York prison. There she meets arrogant Wesley Carter, whoβs as handsome as he is dangerous, as mysterious as he is quick-witted, and with a reputation that ensures people will keep their distance. As teacher and student, Kat and Carter are forced to leave their animosities at the door and learn that one should never judge a book by its cover. As Carterβs barriers begin to crumble, Kat realizes thereβs much more to her angry student than she thought, leaving them to face a new, perilous obstacle: their undeniable attraction to one another. When Carter is released and Kat continues to tutor him on the outside, the obstacles mount. Can they fight the odds to make their relationship work? Will Katβs family and friends ever accept her being with someone of his background? And will Katβs discovery of Carterβs role on the night her father died force them apart forever...or unite them?
I wasn’t sure what to expect from a book that has the heroine falling for the hero while he’s in jail. But I have to say, Sophie Jackson did a great job of bringing these two broken characters together in a way that felt believable and very real.
Carter was a really rough, often crude, character. There were times I knew I really wouldn’t like him, if it weren’t for the fact that his inner monologue was there to show you that what came out of his mouth was mostly a defense mechanism. Carter was a man who was beaten down by his family and life in general. But it’s the scars from his family that pushed him down the path he was on when he met Kat. It’s not until Kat that someone sees beyond Carter’s bluster to the caring man he is at his core.
Kat wasn’t without her own set of emotional baggage. Witness to the death of her father, she’s tormented by those events, even as she lives her adult life based on the promise she made her father. And even worse, her mother and her best friends seem to start turning against her as she moves forward with her prison teaching position. While those close to her choose not to really listen to Kat, it’s Carter and is attitude that seem to break through Kat’s walls, helping her understand who she really is.
This was a great angsty read. Even though I would have loved to have found out more about why Kat’s best friend Beth was so easily swayed to do what she did to Kat or even why Carter’s cousin Adam didn’t stand up sooner, and lastly what kind of relationship Kat and Carter had with Kat’s friends and family after everything, I still enjoyed this story immensely. If was different and kept my attention, even when the call of summer sun beckoned. Definitely one to pick up and try.
Shannon
Latest posts by Shannon (see all)
- ARC Review: My Royal Showmance by Lexi Blake - June 10, 2024
- ARC Review: Forgotten Desires by Corinne Michaels - June 10, 2024
- Release Blitz: My Royal Showmance – Lexi Blake - June 4, 2024
- Release Blitz: The Surrogate – Penelope Ward - February 26, 2024
- ARC Review: Tempting Promises by Corinne Michaels - February 13, 2024