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R**K
Just wanted to stay with Clint and Summer forever
To cut to the chase, I unabashedly adored this book. Bottom line: well written, well edited, actually funny without potty humor. Yes, there is "language" used. If you don't like four-letter words beginning in "f,"them move along. But I will say it is not used merely to display "I am cool and I say the eff word repeatedly and with great relish." It fits the story and flows, not a jarring, oh, look, I am tough because I can say that word. And the sex, well, it is hot and fun and I actually read those scenes instead of skipping to the end of the chapter. Yep, the sex scenes, sometimes how they do confuse me. I get caught up in trying to picture if something can physically be done by a human with bones and it just takes away from the experience. This time, I was afraid I would actually miss something so I read every word. And I am glad I did.The rest of this review, well, it is just some gushing I had to get off my chest.I will often give myself a challenge, pick a freebie/cheapie that has been on your electronic device forever, start it, realize it is dreck, and then dump it, and go on with your life. Sounds silly, but sometimes I feel the need to accomplish something and this is the easiest thing to do to check something off my list.Well, this time it bit me in my ever-expanding butt. Started it, and then nothing else got accomplished on my list until it was done, done, done.Why did I think I wouldn't like it? Well, I had no memory of downloading it so that means it was free or pretty darn close. The cover has "award winning" or something like that on it. This can meananything from winning the Booker Prize to winning the Writer with Most Heart at a local writing co-op. Since Ms. Graykowski only has two books on Amazon, my assumption was more toward the Heart and lesstowards the Booker. And then there were the shoes. The beautiful red stilettos on the cover. Admittedly shallow, I equal this type of shoe to someone I can't relate to. And then the football. The happiest day ofthe year passed just a while back, you know, that day where they have the Super Bowl to celebrate the last dang day of that exercise in violence, football. Did I really want to read about it. Well, if you are a sports romance fan, don't look to this book for that fix. It is merely a tool, well used, for the story. It is off season, there are no heated rivalries for the starting QB role in the fall.I digress. Perfect Summer is about a no-nonsense teacher who has had a lot of pain in her life, emotional pain, taunting, feelings of inadequacy, tests that she failed to gain love and acceptance. And that wasjust from her mother. Because of her size, her weight, her appearance, Summer Ames (and yeah, the name is evocative of a Beach Blanket Bingo movie) had come to the conclusion that was reinforced allof her life that she was too fat, too ugly to get a man and keep him. These experiences are shared in heartbreaking yet humorous ways throughout the book. The good news for readers who hate, hate, hate the"she is an ugly duckling, but look, we take off her glasses, shake her hair and, BAM, we have ourselves a sex godess," let me assure you that doesn't happen here.What we have is a woman who views herself as overweight, has unruly hair, and a lifetime of being shown she is not quite good enough. And also what we have is a man who loves her mouth.Yep. A mouth-loving hero. Enter Clinton Grayson. Now, Mr. Grayson is gorgeous, intelligent, athletic, and oh, yeah, since he is a quarterback, I need to say gorgeous again. A middle linebacker, a safety, yeah,they aren't required by the rules to be gorgeous. But those dang quarterbacks must be fine of face or what is the point, ya know what I mean?Mr. Grayson, though, has a bit of an image problem. He has allowed a misunderstanding to be perpetuated about an ex-girlfriend. In order to get that retirement golden ticket, a media position, QB Grayson mustdo some damage control. His PR agent, Aunt Bunny, comes up with something that puts our boy Clint in Ms. Ames' classroom as a mentor for at-risk kids.Let the shenanigans begin.Suffice it to say hilarity ensues. And I mean hilarity. But there are also some very touching moments, moments that made me think. It is obivous and stated from the beginning of the book that each of ourprotags have a burden to bear, and that burden was placed on them squarely by their parental units. Summer's itty bitty mom made Summer feel ugly and huge and made Summer feel as if she had to pass teststo get that maternal love all girls desperately want but be dismissive of. Flip the story to our male protag, and his paternal parental unit made sure he knew that he would never quite match up. How they deal with these issues is very similar and sometimes painful to see play out. But they are dealt with positively and oh, so humorously.Anyway, there is not an ugly duckling transformation via weight loss and glasses removal, which was a great relief to me. Guess what, Summer is not as ugly as she thinks she is, surprise! Who saw that coming.But Clint does make a strategic "let me treat this wonderful woman to a makeover" blunder, but it is handled well and realistically. She doesn't transform into a size 2 with a good haircut and a two-week regimen of intense exercise.You can see the arc of their relationship, you can see it build. You know what he finds attractive, sexy even, in a woman who doesn't see it in herself. It isn't a sudden realization he has two-thirds of the waythrough the book. It is something he sees and appreciates from day one. You see the depths of their character emerge in a believable way (all right, a bit of willing suspension of disbelief is required here andthere, but it is so well written and so fun, it seems right).One of the astounding things about this book was how many relationships are shown and how well they are portrayed. Clint's dad is dead. Clint's mom is barely mentioned. No idea if she is still walking this mortal plane. Summer's dad died when she was very young so no allusions as to their relationship. But Summer's mom is front and center. You might want to hate her, and you probably do intermittently throughout the book. But her own issues are highlighted and dealt with. Unbeknownst to Summer, there is a man in her mom's life, too. And oh, my goodness, her humor is as wonderful as her daughter's. As their love stories progress in an almost parallel way, you are shown that these two women could become very, very close if only certain barriers were torn down. And most surprisingly, the evil mom has a fabulous relationship with her smart-mouth maid. Okay, a bit of a stock-character vibe shines through, but still well done and very funny.Summer, of course, has some wacky neighbors who happen to be gay, again a stock character/couple you often see done poorly, too over the top for words. Not so in this case. Look, they have a killer cat that will act on command. What's not to love. Being a teacher to at-risk kids, again, there was the ubiquitous at-risk kid we all fell in love with. But a light touch, with love, was given to these characters. A bit of sequel bait was smelled with the late intro of a couple of Clint's teammates, but I am amenable to that so it didn't bother me.Early on there is a scene where Summer and Clint cook together. Over the phone. Trust me. It works. It made me want to lick my Kindle. So fresh, innovative, and just yummy. It was a representation of just how these two people interacted, how they drew on each other, helped each other. Again, I want a spoonful of that.There is no big MIS in this book. There are a number of misunderstandings, but hey, guess what, they talked them out and they dealt with them. Go figure.I am not a fan of my Kindle Fire as far as ease of use. When I read a book, I read for me. I don't write notes because it is a PITA and the Kindle Fire just makes it even harder (yes, I am old). But I wrotenote after note. I highlighted passage after passage. Too many of them to choose from, to involved in the weavings of the story to just pull and quote. I often use the highlighting while reading because that is simple enough, but I generally use it just to show yet another editing error or misspelled word. I highlighted twice in this book to point out a typo.There were two things that kind of disturbed me about the book, but I honestly think there was nothing nefarious about them. Background, I am a huge Jennifer Crusie fan. I am a bigger fan of Bet Me. I have iton Audible and I literally will fall asleep listening to it at night. I will listen to parts of it through the day if I want background noise. I all but have it memorized. Bet Me has a large-ish female protag and a too-dang-beautiful-to-be-mortal male protag. The female protag in Bet Me has an itty bitty mom, too. That kind of made me go, uh-oh. Then there was a line or two that seemed to be to be straight out of Bet Me. One was "You dress like you hate your body." Now, this line or something very similar to it was a pivotal point in the Bet Me story line. The other line is Summer saying "As my mother says, the world isn't kind to fat people." Again, a very similar line was used in Bet Me. I will admit this made me a little uncomfortable. But my unease was for naught. These are common themes, common messages in a book with a "fat" girl. Nothing else in the book in any way gave a hint of overborrowing of words.Bottom line part two. I loved it. I wanted to take it out for a walk. I wanted to buy it a chocolate cookie. I wanted to hang out with it by the pool. I just wanted it to be my new BFF.
J**J
A fun read with lots of laughs
School teacher Summer Ames is used to being on the outside. Constantly put down by her mother and jilted by a fiance who, as it turns out, only went out with her for money, she's not expecting a happily ever after. But the one place she fits in is the classroom, where she does everything she can to guide at-risk students to a better future. And when she wins Teacher of the Year, it seems she's finally being recognized for something more than being an overweight disappointment. Except instead of a vacation or a new car, she gets stuck with a slimy NFL star who thinks “mentoring” her students is a good way to clean up his image and get an endorsement deal. But he is pretty easy on the eyes…But...The problem with my reading a story set in Austin is that I recognize everything, especially the fictional parts, and I get distracted by things that seem off. Like, I get the whole creative license thing, but we all know we're nowhere near big enough to support a pro football team. And why did Grayson call it Town Lake when it became Ladybird Lake like six years before this book was published? And where's this inner city area Summer's teaching in? East side over by Montopolis on the edge of the city would make sense, and all the crappy areas I know are east and southeast. Oh, and that lovely area around Rundberg where the scariest looking hookers in the world troll. Is that considered inner city even though it's more on the fringe? Why don't I know my city????? See, I get distracted by the dumbest things.Judging Covers: I don't understand the cover. Is that supposed to be Austin? Where's the Frost building? Sure, I avoid downtown like it's infested with zombies or those rabid sales chicks at Victoria's Secret, but this doesn't look familiar at all. And whose high heels are those on the cover? Summer always dresses…well…kinda dumpy. Baggy jeans and t-shirts, no heels…Dammit, I'm so confused! Don't get me wrong. It's a cute cover. It just doesn't seem to go very well with the story I just read.The Verdict: Turning off my stupidly analytical train of thought, it's a fun read. Summer's snark is just awesome, and I love the way she not only doesn't hold back, but she fires away even when surrounded by reporters. She certainly puts Clint in his place right away. Her love for her students is evident, but it's not overdone the way so many other books have it. I'm not sure what it is, but she does everything she can for them without making it sound like charity.And Clint is rather interesting. Sure, he's only there for the good publicity at first, but it's clear he's not a bad guy. He might be thinking about his own interests, but he's quick to help a struggling football player improve his form, and he doesn't once turn his nose up at the less that ideal students he's faced with. He's quick to notice Summer as well, and while his immediate interest might be a little on the pervy side, he clearly sees her differently than he sees herself. Summer's self-confidence issues are completely understandable. Her mom is downright evil (or so it seems for quite a while), and while Summer is way different than the girl she once was, she'll never be thin and petite, and her issues from her childhood are deeply embedded.The romance is cute, starting out as simply a hell of an attraction and becoming something much more as they get to know each other. There's no real conflict aside from Summer's issues with her body, but just as quickly as those become a problem, Clint eases them away. I love that Summer didn't go through some transition to become more attractive, like a permanent makeover, new wardrobe, or diet. Sure, there was a night out where she got all gussied up, but it didn't stick, so this wasn't a Pygmalion kind of thing.All in all, it was a fun read, a nice helping of fluff and happily ever after interspersed with some laughs. It was more ideal than 100% believable, but in that sense it was more of a feel-good romance, which is exactly what I was looking for.
M**Y
Another Gem
Another gem from this author I have never read a book yet I didn't enjoy from her. This book is about a teacher who after winning teacher of the year finds out that her prize it not as last year a car but a American football quarterback in need of a reputation makeover. This book made me laugh out load in several different parts. Summer realising that Clint is nervous of public speaking gets him to sit at the back of the class and talk from there, this was after she threw him out of the class of course. Why? For falling asleep in class why else :-). And so it goes on the laughs keep coming but it is also touching, like when he realises that she makes sandwiches for the whole class as it may be the only thing they eat all day as they all come from a deprived area. Loved this book so much I have recommended it to my family and friends and that was before I finished it.
M**W
First love at all ages
Cleverly written book that focuses on Summer and Clint falling in love but has a charming side story of her mother embracing her true self and finding her happy ever after also.
T**N
A Good Read
I took a while to get into this book but I was glad I stuck with it.This is an enjoyable read and a good start to the series.
A**L
Perfect summer
Good read
J**R
Lovely story
I enjoyed reading this book. It wasn't too soppy just enough sexy scenes to keep one wanting to read more. Can't wait to read the next book
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