![]() ![]() ![]() Handle with Care has plenty of humor, but there’s also swoony sweetness and somber situations in this storyline. ![]() One of the things I love about Helena Hunting is the fact that she can always make me laugh. The relationship they have with their respective families are trying and fragile, but both Lincoln and Wren have so much depth of character, it’s rewarding to see their growth as individuals and as a couple. Wren and Lincoln are perfect for one another, have amazing chemistry, fantastic flirty banter, and I absolutely adored them as a couple. One minute Wren is karate chopping Armstrong into shape and the next, she’s visiting children in the hospital. ![]() Wren is strong and uncompromising when dealing with the latest crisis at the office, but underneath her hard exterior, she has a heart of gold. She’s all business buttoned-up and serious at all times. Wren is the ‘PR fixer’ who wrangles (and sometimes strangles) Lincoln’s atrocious brother, Armstrong. He’s humble, hardworking, magnanimous, and just an all-around good guy. If his father hadn’t passed away, he would still be in a remote village building shelters for the less fortunate. Lincoln hates his dysfunctional family (except for his grandmother) and he hasn’t been back to New York in years. Lincoln is the often referred to but never seen Moorehead brother/Mills cousin from the previous books and I have to say, he might just be my personal favorite of the whole series. The mysterious prodigal son returns to Moorehead Media in the fifth book of the Shacking Up series. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |