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Taking Back Mary Ellen Black (Harlequin Next, No 7)
Taking Back Mary Ellen Black - Harlequin Next, No 7 Author:Lisa Childs A starter marriage hadn't been the first act Mary Ellen Black had meant to script for herself, but bowing out provided hard-won perspective: The most important things in life were not things at all, but the people she held dear. In her case, the lovable eccentrics she called family, the ones who were more than ready to support her leading ro... more »le--if only she'd step into the spotlight. So now Mary Ellen's drafted act two--her return home--and she's pretty sure she's ready for the performance of her Life, starring a strong, single mother of two. She's all dressed up and ready to take on the world...and take back the woman she was meant to be.« less
Millie J. (Millie) - , reviewed Taking Back Mary Ellen Black (Harlequin Next, No 7) on
Helpful Score: 1
"A starter marriage hadn't been the first act Mary Ellen Black had meant to script for herself, but bowing out provided hard-won perspective: The most important things in life were not things at all, but the people she held dear . . . the lovable eccentrics she called family!"
tani reviewed Taking Back Mary Ellen Black (Harlequin Next, No 7) on
Easily readable, and you enjoy seeing how Mary Ellen gradually gets back her self-respect, and deals with her great jerk of an ex-husband and even her constantly-criticizing mother. The frequent misunderstandings with her best friend and the new man she (Mary Ellen) feels attracted to, which come to resemble the artificial twists in plot of a soap opera began to wear on me part way through. Still, it is a cute story.
Unfortunately, it won a one-way ticket to our trash bin with, near the end, around 9 pages of description of torrid sex that I had to flip through to get to the remaining non-explicit pages and the end of the story.
Not my cup of tea at all, but I should have seen it coming in all the references to how hot the guy is and what she would like to do with him, only she so lacks self confidence that she can't believe he might really care for her and not hurt her like her husband. Well, if I had realized it was a Harlequin book, which I only noticed when I came to write a review, I would have known better than to order the book to begin with. (It doesn't say "Harlequin romance" or even "Harlequin" on the front cover.)
Anyone who doesn't like very explicit and long sex scenes should avoid this book. I wish I had.