True Confessions
by:
Rachel Gibson (author)
Welcome to Gospel, Idaho where everyone knows that there are two universal truths. First, God did His best work when He created the Sawtooth Wilderness Area. Second, every sin known to heaven and earth from the hole in the ozone to alien abductions is all California's fault. This...
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Welcome to Gospel, Idaho where everyone knows that there are two universal truths. First, God did His best work when He created the Sawtooth Wilderness Area. Second, every sin known to heaven and earth from the hole in the ozone to alien abductions is all California's fault. This is the story of what happened when a Californian came to visit...L.A. based tabloid reporter Hope Spencer has come to Gospel hoping for inspiration. Well, she gets inspiration...Hope has never met anyone quite like the resident of Gospel. From the Dean sisters with their color-coordinated hair to the toilet-tossing sportsmen...to the murder victim whose body had been found in her house years before. She discovers that really is stranger than fiction even tabloid fiction!And then there is local sheriff Dylan Taber. He is no made-up character from one of her stories. Dylan is all too real...and soon Hope is forced to face the awful truth she's been too long without a man. But once she gets wind of a Hollywood actress somehow mixed up Dylan's life, Hope realizes that if they are to have a furture together, he has some true confessing to do.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780060772741 (0060772743)
ASIN: 60772743
Publish date: June 26th 2007
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
Pages no: 368
Edition language: English
Category:
Love,
Humor,
Funny,
Romance,
Adult,
Contemporary Romance,
Contemporary,
Modern,
Womens Fiction,
Chick Lit,
Romantic
Series: Gospel, Idaho (#1)
Decent story sprinkled with humor about tabloid writer Hope who goes to Gospel, Idaho for six months and local sheriff Dylan a single father raising his young son. I enjoyed the book but it seems after each event someone had to mentally debate their feelings and there was insufficient groveling.
Good book but the ending felt rushed. Loved Dylan, Hope, and Adam enough that they made up for it though.