I couldn’t tell you when I fell in love with Gael Herrera, but I wish I knew how to make it stop.
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I adore his character so much, so when I found out that Flat-Out Matt is actually told in his point of view I automatically want to read it right away. When I read Flat-Out Love last year, Matthew a.k.a Matty/Matt is the main reason why I actually enjoy the book. I haven’t heard anything about it before, so I’m surprised and happy to see it is already available for download. I was browsing amazon last night checking my pre-ordered books that get delayed when I saw this novella of Jessica Park, Flat-Out Matt. Take an emotional skydive for two prequel chapters and seven Flat-Out Love chapters retold from his perspective, and then land with a brand-new steamy finale chapter from Julie. Live his side of the story, break when his heart breaks, and fall for the unlikely hero all over again. Now go deeper into Matt’s world in this FLAT-OUT MATT novella. You saw Matt through Julie’s eyes in FLAT-OUT LOVE. Particularly his fragile sister Celeste, who may need Julie the most. Without telling her the truth, without shattering them all. And until he falls in love with Julie, and Julie falls in love with Finn.īut … Matt is the right one for her. And until it snowballs into heart-squeezing insanity. It seems harmless enough until her short-term stay becomes permanent. When beautiful, cool, insightful Julie moves in with Matt’s family, why (oh why!) does he pretend to be his absent brother Finn for her alleged benefit? It’s what you do with it when you see it that does.” “ Well, you remember how Aunt Bea is always asking Mother how she is feeling, as if she had a special reason for asking?” Looking back, Ramona realized Beezus was right. “Why would Mother do a thing like that when she already has us?” “ Don’t ask me,” said Beezus, “but I’m pretty sure she is.” “Why?” asked Ramona, hoping her sister was wrong. “I think Mother won’t be working much longer, because she’s going to have a baby.” Ramona sat down on the bed with a thump. He doesn’t know anything about oil except it costs a lot, and do you know what I think?” Beezus did not wait for Ramona to answer. “You don’t think Daddy would go to Gaudy Arabia, do you? Even if it would be warmer than that awful frozen-food warehouse where he works?” “Saudi Arabia,” corrected Beezus. How do we know Daddy will get a job?” Ramona, who had imagined every school would want a man as nice as her father, now had a new worry. She said schools are laying off teachers. I won’t speak to her either.” “And I heard something Aunt Bea said,” continued Beezus. “She doesn’t have any right to say things like that about Daddy. |