Helpful Score: 6
Cute, fluffy and a quick read. Kate Bradshaw is a love advice columnist in need of some inspiration after her divorce. Mike Cameron is a movie special effects animator looking to add more to his life. The two definitely make some sparks and Ortolon does a good job in working through Kate's fears and issues.
Helpful Score: 5
Kate Bradshaw's popular "Dear Cupid" Web advice column helps the hapless and hopeless find true love. But in the aftermath of her painful divorce, Kate's advice turns too bitter for her boss's taste. To retain her job and regain her zest for romance, Kate leaves her native Texas hill country for a business trip to L.A., where she practices her flirting technique on the first attractive man she sees, movie special-effects man Mike Cameron. Kate confidently expects that Mike will disappear from her life after their brief meeting. Instead, he falls in love with her. Sensing Kate's wariness of relationships, but desperate to be part of her life, Mike hires her to turn him, his clothes and his home into marriage material. His decision to withhold the identity of the wife he has in mind keeps the two at comic cross-purposes. Even after they give in to their attraction, Mike must win acceptance from Kate's son, Dylan, and convince her that forever is not a dirty word.
Helpful Score: 4
Okay but the characterizations are a little bit to extreme.
Helpful Score: 2
Although she isn't a fan of Happily Ever After, Kate Bradshaw is stuck writing a Dear Cupid column. Julie Ortolon is witty and laugh-out-loud funny.
Helpful Score: 1
Kate is Dear Cupid, but doesn't want a man. Michael is an animator and falls in love at first sight with Kate -- but how will he win her over? A good fun read.