Today we are pleased to feature Bethany Turner's latest romcom, The Do-Over. Melissa enjoyed her previous novel, Plot Twist (reviewed here), and is excited to read this one too. Thanks to HarperCollins, we have THREE copies to give away!
Sometimes dreams come true. Other times, the best outcome begins with an epic fail.
Career-driven McKenna Keaton has devoted her life to attaining the senior partnership at her law firm. So asking a man on a date should be nothing. But the past four days have been the worst of her life and have called everything she thought she knew about herself into question. Besides, she can’t remember her last real date—one that didn’t involve using a blind date as an opportunity to get a stranger’s perspective on effective cross-examination techniques. (It’s like sharing fondue with a jury!)But a real date? And with shy, nerdy Henry Blumenthal—McKenna’s high school rival for valedictorian who once took three hours to beat her at chess? Scratch that. He’s Hank Blume now, the famed documentarian, Durham’s darling son, who has attained all his dreams and more. He also happens to look like he stepped out of an Eddie Bauer catalog.
Whereas McKenna is a disgraced workaholic from New York on unpaid leave, accused of a white-collar crime she would never commit, succumbing to panic attacks, watching her dreams unravel. At age thirty-eight—and destined by the family curse to die before she turns forty, it appears—it’s absolutely the wrong time to have a major crush on a man. Especially one who treasures his memories of McKenna as the girl Most Likely to Succeed. (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)
—Lauren Layne, New York Times bestselling author
“Bethany Turner has crafted a delightful, witty story with zippy dialogue, warmly relatable characters, and hilariously apt pop culture references. I found myself sneaking off to read just one more chapter. I’m still smiling thinking about this book. Reading it felt like eating a big bowl of Lucky Charms mixed with Fruity Pebbles. A colorful explosion of happy.”
—Rachel Linden, bestselling author of The Enlightenment of Bees
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17 comments:
Personally, I would like to do-over my college years and invest more in my health and wellbeing, rather than racing through my education to earn a diploma and not focus on what was most important, which was insuring I was healthy and happy.
Doing over my early adulthood and showing more empathy, compassion and kindness to family.
No, because if I did I would probably not be with my husband and have had the experiences in life that have made me who I am.
I would have been nicer/kinder to my parents during my teen years if I could do that over again. Thanks for the chance!
I would have asked my parents more about their pasts.
The decisions I made when I was young.
I think if I had chosen to go to a different high school, the same one as the majority of my classmates instead of to the same school as my neighbour, my whole life would be different in a good way.
I'd like to do-over my teens years.
Some decisions I made after my divorce.
I said no to an okay internship for a better one. But sometimes I wonder the what if!
not sure
I'd like to do-over my high school years
Definitely my 20s.
My high school years
The school years
I'd like to do over my high school years
I would like to do over some of the decisions I made before I got married so young.
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