Walking Disaster by Jamie McGuire

Walking Disaster (Beautiful, #2)

by Jamie McGuire

Set in the same time-frame as Beautiful Disaster, now we hear the story from Travis' point of view. Travis lost his mother at a very young age, but before she died she taught him two important rules... Love hard. Fight harder. Growing up in a family of men who like to gamble and fight, Travis Maddox is a tough guy. Known for his bad reputation with women, and feared for his incredible fighting skills, all the boys want to be him, while the girls simply want him... Abby Abernathy is the first girl to treat him the way he feels he should be treated, with dislike and disinterest. It is her lack of interest that sparks his determination to win her round. Will the invincible Travis 'Mad Dog' Maddox be defeated by a girl?

Reviewed by kimbacaffeinate on

5 of 5 stars

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4.5 After devouring the turbulent romance of Travis and Abby in Beautiful Disaster I was on pins and needles awaiting the companion book Walking Disaster told from Travis point of view. Every story has two sides and McGuire shared the raw, gritty, emotional side of Travis and his relationship with Abby. I literally consumed this in a single afternoon, as I laughed, cried and found myself swept up in the beautiful disaster of these damaged soul-mates.

The tale mirrors the events of Travis Maddox and Abby Abernathy's rocky relationship as portrayed from Abby’s point of view in Beautiful Disaster but this time through the eyes and heart of Travis. If you haven’t read Abby’s then I recommend you do so. There are slight variances to the tale as Travis perceives things differently. We get inside Travis’s head to see his damaged, vulnerable, sensitive side. Something I knew was there all along, but it also showed Abby’s issues, fears, and her contribution to the storm they created.

It is very hard not to become emotionally attached to Abby and Travis. They are flawed, crazy, often times needy, fearless, passionate, mature, juvenile and lost looking for an anchor. Abby is trying desperately to escape her past as Travis has spent the past eleven years cutting off his emotions and attachments in fear of losing someone again. Their fractured, broken personalities make them volatile. He is too needy and she is afraid of loving him because he closely mirrors her past. Together they are a storm gathering off the coast, magnificent and deadly. At their core they are good, honest and loving. Against the odds they work as a couple. McGuire demonstrated how each makes the other better, stronger, and wiser. I think we get a better understanding of America and Shep and their friendship, love and impact on the couple.

Told from Travis’s point of view, we see his insecurities, what drives his violent outbursts and his love for Abby. For years he cut off his emotions and now he feels to much and it's raw and powerful. We see the damaged side of Abby and the things she did; running from hot to cold as she struggles with her own emotional issues. We see his efforts and mistakes driven by his need to make Abby the center of his universe. Right or wrong the characters are well-developed, raw and genuine. Travis’s perspective captivated me and reality slipped away as the tale unfolded effortlessly. I actual preferred Travis’s perspective and I think it’s because I already knew how damaged Abby was. The odds of a relationship like theirs surviving are low and yet McGuire makes it believable. The epilogue was sweet and gives us a glimpse at their future. Do I still wish these two fractured souls were offered helped other than a bottle of Jimmy Bean? Heck yes! These books are appropriately titled as alone Travis is a walking disaster and together they make a beautiful disaster.

Fans of Beautiful Disaster will enjoy Travis’s perspective in Walking Disaster. McGuire is working on the Maddox Brothers Series. They will give us Trent and Thomas’s stories. They will be on my auto-buy list.

ARC provided for unbiased review.
See more of my reviews @ Caffeinated Book Reviewer

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 19 March, 2013: Finished reading
  • 19 March, 2013: Reviewed