Also by this author: Ghosted
Published by Independently Published on April 12th 2015
Genres: New Adult
Pages: 245 pages
Format: eBook
ASIN: B00W2FR0RC
Goodreads
Reece Hatfield has just one rule when it comes to falling in love: don't fucking do it. There's no room in his life for another person. He can barely keep a handle on things as it is. A shadow of the man he used to be, Reece spends his days tattooing, the artist inside of him longing for the chance to do something different.
Avery Moore is all dance, all the time. Ballet is all she's ever known, and she's damn good at it. Her body is her art, a living canvas that captivates Reece the first time he lays his eyes on her.
He yearns to leave his mark on her body... in more ways than one.
The tattooed degenerate with a shady past. The beautiful ballerina with a bright future. They live in different worlds, yet somehow, they fit. But just because they fit doesn't mean they belong together. Cracks sometimes form. Two pieces don't always make a whole. The course of love never did run smoothly. Things get messy.
And Reece doesn't do messy.
Not anymore.
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When I first started reading this The Mad Tatter by J.M. Darhower, I honestly felt like I had read the story and reviewed the book before. Tattooed bad boy and rich girl find romance in the big city–been there, done that, and I have the T shirt.
What makes this different is that the bad boy has a daughter, a sassy little girl who is cute, spoiled, and charming. When I finished the book, I liked it, but I felt like parts of the book were unfinished and I felt rushed to get to know these characters.
It was a nice read, and the prologue, intermission, and finale actually pulled at me and I wanted to know more about the character Reece’s background. Unfortunately, I only got the high lights, and I think this story really deserved the high lights, low lights, and those black spots which would have made the book so much more. I really did like the story and the characters, but for me this book felt incomplete. I needed the characters more fleshed out. It seemed like both Reece ‘Rhys’ Hatfield and Avery Moore were just scratching an itch.
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