
Or will Hannah manage to win over her crush? Will Fox get over his feeling for Hannah? As if this itself isn’t torturous enough, he agrees to help her win over her crush’s love. Now Hannah is in town for a movie that she is working on, and she has no choice but to crash in Fox’s spare bedroom. And because she enjoys his company so much, she wants to remain friends with him. But quite strangely, seems to like him for his personality and carefree banter. Hannah, the one girl who doesn’t want to get physical with him. Hannah, who doesn’t seem to fall for his charm. Then why does everything become meaningless when he meets Hannah Bellinger? And that is exactly how he has liked it all these years. Thus, with the ground rules clearly laid, his standard operating procedure pretty much remains the same. Never the one to care much for emotions anyway, he always avoids getting into relationships. After all, it is not for nothing that he is known as the player, the flirt, the heartbreaker. To top it all, he is quite a ladies man himself. His dashing good looks and raw masculine appeal are enough to have the ladies swoon all over him. The book uses simple English that can be read by all levels of readers (including beginners).įox Thornton, the King crab fisherman, is known as the Casanova of the town. Expect a friends-to-lovers story that is set in the small sea town of Westport in the American state of Washington.

Expect a book that features a rather unusual romantic pair – A King crab fisherman and a Hollywood production assistant. Read on to know more about the book and about my experience of reading it.Įxpect a contemporary romance fiction that is equal parts emotional and equal parts fun.

Without delving deeper, I decided to go ahead and give it a listen. A breezy feel-good read, if you will.Īnd then popped up, on my Storytel app, the suggestion for the second book in the series – Hook, Line, and Sinker. In the mood for a similar break, I was on the lookout for something romantic but not too heavy.

The book turned out to be an effortless read and came as a welcome break from the heavy reading I was doing back then. I had read Tessa Bailey’s It Happened One Summer, a few months ago and enjoyed it. Like a summer day showing up after a hundred years of winter.” “I could tell by the way you looked at her, she was something real special.” “How did I look at her?” He was afraid to find out.
