"She's just a girl, Grayson. A girl who saved my life. I wanted to sweep the hair away from her face, feel her body against me, without an audience or the threat of my imminent death. Connecting with her had felt different. Real. I had to get to know her. At least I had her name. Wren Caswell. The rest would be easy. Since the night I saved him, I'd felt a magnetic pull toward Grayson so strong, it scared me. I thought it was some sort of mystical thing, that once you saved someone's life, you always had some connection. But then he'd looked at me, those bangs grazing his eyebrows, the top button of his tee casually undone, and it wasn't only his well-being I thought about"--Back cover.
When Wren inadvertently saves Grayson's life, they are compelled to shed their pasts, figure out who they are, and fall in love. The plot contains profanity and alcohol use.
This review was originally posted on The Bumbling Bookworm
I was looking forward to this, I'd heard some decent things about it and I was enjoying it in the beginning. I mean it had everything I usually enjoy: NYC, a romance, a bad boy - what more could I want? Unfortunately, the longer I read The Promise of Amazing, the less enthusiastic I became about it.
Check out the rest of my review here!
Reading updates
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Started reading
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24 April, 2014:
Finished reading
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24 April, 2014:
Reviewed