I'm all caught up in this series. Can't wait for the next book. I have to say that Genevieve & Adam are my favorite couple for this series so far. I so wanted to slap Deo, Cohen and Enzo when they were mean to Adam. I liked how Adam believed in Gen when no one else did. He knew what she was capable of when her parents and family didn't think she was too smart. Adam & Gen got married for the wrong reason but behind it was always the right one. He's been tutoring her and they've been in love but neither one really saw it. Genevieve is a strong willed female, she's independent but she's also a little bit lost. No one has belived she's smart enough to get through school and that has made her vulnerable. It also makes her doubt herself. But once she figures out what she wants she goes after it. Like any marriage, Adam & Gen have their problems and they have to work through them. Gen's family don't believe in her the way Adam does. They don't see that she's really smart and not just someone who can work in her families business. In a way, working for her father is killing Gen's hopes of ever getting out. But once Adam tells her about his problem, she provides a solution. She's marrying him because she loves him and she finally figured out that Deo was just a crush. I love the emotions this stories make me feel. Highly recommend this series. Jews in Love!…or how I learned to stop worrying and cook with duck fat.OK, this book really isn’t about duck fat, but it is mentioned several times in connection with cooking (Israelis use duck fat and American Jews tend to use chicken schmaltz (which we really don’t anymore because it’s a guaranteed heart attack)).Sometimes it’s just really fun to read a book and find…me in it. Someone I can relate to in every way (Adam) or in almost every way (Genevieve). There aren’t a lot of Jewish MCs in romance novels, though we sometimes show up as the best friend – as in, the character has a Jewish name, but nothing else. I think authors write books and make the characters as generically American as possible so that the most amount of people will relate to the characters (Christianity doesn’t fare much better either – if I see them going to church I sometimes do a double take). So yeah, it’s fun to see my culture and religion reflected in a story and see things that I totally relate to – like duck fat.Now, besides the fact that the MCs are Jewish, I loved this book. I mean, really loved it. Adam and Genevieve are really awesome people that remind me of people I’m friends with. They’re real. They’re good. They’re fun. And I love the way they love each other. They’re crazy about each other, but because they don’t know each other all that well, they’re terrified at times to say it, or don’t know how to show it. And I thought that awkwardness was really sweet and realistic. No Stupid Mistake. No Big Misunderstanding (OK, a little misunderstanding, but what do you expect – they didn’t exactly know each other when they married – and, thank God, it has absolutely nothing to do with Gen’s former crush (because that would be too cliche for a book this good)). I’m going to keep my eye out for the fourth book in the series and catch up with the first two. And not because the characters are Jewish. Nope, it’s because Steph Campbell and Liz Reinhardt are such damned good writers.BTW, the people on the cover were perfect for this book. They looked exactly like what I thought the characters should look like and it was a great feeling to find the cover helped rather than hindered (you know, like in a book where a guy is in a wheelchair but on the cover he’s standing, or she’s blond, but not on the cover, or one of them is black and on the cover they are white (yeah, I’ve seen that)…which to me is probably the most blatant example of a publisher NOT reading the book.).
What do You think about Limits (2013)?
¡4.5 estrellas!Mi libro favorito hasta el momento :3
—ktague
was a good addition to the series.
—darthramathorn