I Can't Get Over: The Rakess

Y'all. Please. Have a seat. We need to talk about Scarlett Peckham's masterpiece, The Rakess. This book might be my favorite book of 2020. It wrecked me, in the best way possible. It was not particularly uplifting read, but I found the storyline so heart-wrenching and real. I loved it.



We meet Sera, a feminist writer, no stranger to romantic trysts, who is working on a new piece to expose the high-society men who ruined her along the way. While working on her new book in her childhood home, she encounters Adam, a widowed father and architect. The two start an amorous affair on a deadline, but they find themselves more and more attached to one another.

This book has a lot in it. A lot of the past, pain, and misunderstanding. But it also says a lot about the nature of true love and what HEA looks like for the hurt, brokenhearted, and world-weary. It looks at true love between equals. This book made me think and feel differently than other romances that I've read recently!

I have read some this author's other works ("The Duke I Tempted" and "The Lord I Ruined") and loved them both, but for entirely different reasons. But I find her writing style to be smart, witty, and addictive.

Rating: 💘💘💘💘💘/5 

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