![]() ![]() I'd give at least a star to the Aiden/Erin romance. I think I'd have no problem delivering a baby after reading one or two of these books. Yet again melodramatic and more detailed than the love scenes. We got more births - yes, births, plural. We were once again reminded any woman over thirty-five is a waste of space, and is too old and beyond redemption. We got lectured to about caring for the disabled - again. When an author starts destroying their characters in order to find new plotlines you know it's time for a series to end. Jack telling Mel he missed having the opportunity to have sex with her during her `time of the month' destroyed any romance left between them.Īnd the only occasionally likeable Mel was completely massacred here too, with all of her usual self-absorption and pushiness shining through and culminating in a dreadful storyline for the character. ![]() Once she'd killed Jack's character, she killed Jack and Mel's relationship. And there's no better way to kill the romance of a romantic hero than write him into a conversation about vaginal dryness and what new lubricants are on the market. We got another lesson in the details of menopause - but this time it happened when Jack had a conversation about it. The region has a disproportionate percentage of residents who make a living from working between women's legs. In a medical textbook, and in a Robyn Carr `romance'. There are two places you're guaranteed to hear about vaginal dryness. ![]()
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