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Title: Two Weeks NoticeMy Review:
Author: Whitney G.
Published by: Indie
Release Date: July 19, 2018
Pages: 242
Genres: Contemporary, Romance
Reading Challenges: CC's Goodreads Reading Challenge
Find it: Goodreads ✩ Amazon
My rating:
Blurb:To Whom It May Concern:
I am writing this letter to formally announce my resignation from Parker International (& the arrogant, condescending CEO) effective two weeks from today.
This was a VERY EASY decision to make, as the past two years have been utterly miserable. I wish his next executive assistant all the luck in the world (she'll need it) and if my boss should need me to do anything over the next two weeks, kindly tell him that he can do it [his] goddamn self...
Sincerely (Not Really),Tara Lauren
That’s the version of my two weeks’ notice I should’ve sent to my boss, because the more professional version—the one where I said I was "grateful for all the opportunities," and "honored by all the rewarding experiences" over the years?
That letter was rejected with his sexy, trademark smirk and an “I highly suggest you read the fine print of your contract...”
So, I did.
And now I've realized that unless I fake my death, poison him, or find a way to renegotiate my impossible contract, I’m stuck working under one of the cockiest and most ruthless bosses in New York.
Then again, I thought that was the case until he called me late last night with an emergency proposition...
This was a great book! It had everything I wanted when I read it. Dominating man in the office and the bedroom, but with a sweet side that only people close to him can see. This book had a great build up to an relationship. I don’t care that it was unconventional, in fact, I quite that about this story, it gave it a uniqueness that other books in this genre are usually missing.
Tara is a saucy woman working in a male dominated world. But she can dish it out as much as she can take it, and really you have to in order to survive there. I loved the way she didn’t back down when she felt her way was better. But she wasn’t annoying in her reasoning to get them to see things her way. And she wasn’t one to be bitter when she messed up. She dealt with it and moved forward. She was mature, funny and extremely efficient at her job. All qualities that are attractive to a CEO.
Preston was a ‘talk is cheap’ kind of guy. And he wasn’t one to be vindictive when he was wronged or as I like to think of it, being put in his place. He didn’t have blinders on when it came to criticism, he took it and processed it and changed it if it worked for him and/or his company. Something that a lot of alpha males in books these days definitely need IMO. He had the strangest sweet side I have ever read. It was like a passive agressive with a side of selfish, sweet side. If that makes sense. It’s kinda hard to explain, it’s more subtle and he only does it when he thinks no one notices. I don’t know why he doesn’t want Tara to notice it. He does everything else in his power to get her to stay, if he just told and maybe wasn’t so secretive about how he really felt I have no doubt she would have stayed.
Ya know, reading this review back makes me want to re-read this book again. I just might.
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