Romantically Challenged Author:Beth Orsoff When L.A. entertainment lawyer Julie Burns becomes convinced that finding The One is "just a numbers game," she sets out on a dating frenzy. From chance meetings and blind dates to dating services and the wonderful world of the Internet, Julie will try anything to meet her man. And in the process, she discovers a secret or two about the single l... more »ife: Sometimes love sneaks up on you when you least expect it-and even the worst first impressions can have surprising results.« less
This was a fun, cute, and entertaining read. Yes, it was completely predictable, but I got some good laughs out of it, and it was a perfect morning-commute book, as I didn't have to concentrate too hard on it. My only real complaint is that they did not spend enough time in the conclusion and seemed like a race to "hurry up and finish."
Overall the book was great. The characters were well developed and likable, however it was nice that they were human i.e. not perfect. There was enough conflict/issues and they were mostly realistic. The ending however left something to be desired. It ended rather abruptly. I am sure it was intentional so that the reader could decide the ending but I wish it had a little more.
A great cute little read that kept me chuckling and reading til the end. The story follows a successful LA lawyer who is listening to her internal clock, but still having a hard time finding the guy who checks off everything on her must have list.
I loved that this book read different than most when the main character is in pursuit of the perfect guy. I couldn't pick out the guy she would end up with until very close to the ending. The different dates she went on were more than entertaining!
A cute little read that I would recommend to the lady readers who need some cute fluff between those deep emotional reads!
I thought this book was ok, but I would recommened getting it at your locale library instead of wasting your money away. The ending was rushed and the characthers did not develop. The beginning was ok, but the end was what killed it.