Nobody Puts Romcoms in the Corner by Kathryn Freeman

Thank you at @rararesources and @KathrynFreeman1 for letting me part of this tour and reviewing this book. I absolutely loveed Nobody puts romcoms in a corner. I loved how they reacted all my favourite romance films espeacily Pretty women , dirty danceing, ghost and never been kissed. I found i was drawn to the book straight away and could not put it down because i beeded to know if Sally got her happy ever after. I loved the book all the way through. Sally and Harry are great characters i was rooting for them. Her friends where great to and i loved the cafe would live to go there. Awsome read 5 stars will definatly read more from Kathryn Freeman in the future. If you like good romance book i strongly recommed this. Nobody Puts Romcoms In The Corner Not an expert, not even close, not in any of this. But nobody will try harder than me to make you happy. Sally is a classic romantic and Harry is a classic cynic, but when a drunken bet leads the new flatmates to (badly) recreate ‘the lift’ from Dirty Dancing, and the video goes viral (#EpicRomcomReenactmentFailure), they both realise there’s potential financial benefit in blundering their way through the romcom lexicon for their suddenly vast social media following. Now, as Harry and Sally bring major romcom moments to new life – including recreating that classic diner scene – their faking it turns to making…out and suddenly they’re living a real life romcom of their own! But like all the greatest love stories, the road to happily ever after is paved with unexpected challenges for this hero and heroine… Purchase Links Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0B67CGBVM Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B67CGBVM Author Bio – For as long as I can remember, I’ve always wanted to write a book. It may have had something to do with my obsession with reading romance. Real life interfered and I headed off in a different direction – into the world of science, becoming a pharmacist before joining the pharmaceutical industry. I did end up writing, but it was about disease and medicines. Decades later, I’m finally doing what I always wanted to do. With a husband who asks every Valentine's Day whether he has to buy a card (yes, he does), all the romance in my life is in my head. Then again, his unstinting support of my career change proves love isn't always about hearts and flowers - and heroes come in many disguises.

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