Grace is a busy woman, working and going to school. She is on her own being abandoned by her parents and having no other family that can help. She is about to finish school and happy that she will be able to work full time to take care of her responsibilities.
The emotion in this book was overwhelming at time, tears just streamed down my face. You felt that raw, slap you in the face, make you want to hug these characters feelings. Laura put you there, she made you feel, she made you want to root for the characters to get it all together.
Dean and Grace had real issues, his friends butted in and made issues worse, and they cared for each other. They had the issues because they were loving each other, trying to make life easier for the other, only they didn't figure that easier meant together.
I cannot wait to dive into the next book in this series. Laura please keep up the emotional spins and the characters loving each other and their family and friends.
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Focus.
Dean Goldsmith is Indiana University’s star quarterback, and his dreams are about to come true. His undefeated season means he has a legitimate shot at the NFL. If he stays focused. Football comes first.
College senior, Grace Yeates, is determined to defy the odds. She is months away from graduating with a business degree, something no one thought she would be able to pull off. All she has to do is focus on her number one priority. Family comes first.
Distraction.
Dean has no time for distractions, but when a gorgeous, snarky, redheaded waitress refuses to tell him her name, he can’t seem to focus on anything else.
Grace knows she can’t let herself get caught up in a guy, particularly a man-whore like Dean, no matter how charming or sexy. She has two hearts to look out for now and no room for a Dean-sized distraction.
Complications.
Everyone in Dean’s life agrees that Grace is the kind of complication his career doesn’t need.
Grace knows that Dean is the kind of risk her heart shouldn’t want.
But what if the last person you think you need, the one you shouldn’t want, becomes the one you can’t live without? Can their biggest distraction actually be the focus they were missing all along?