so my favorite thing about say you'll remember me, there's no motorcycle club to be seen. hooray! you must wonder why i kept reading them if i hated the theme so much. it's because i love her characters. i love reading her stories because i really care about the characters who inhabit them. and this time hendrix and ellison (drix and ellie) are perfection.
she's the governor's daughter. the good girl who believes in what her father stands for. she believes that politics is all about making things better for those who need it. she's not jaded. he is a juvenile delinquent who was just released from a special program after pleading guilty to a violent crime. a crime he did not commit. the experience has profoundly changed him. before he used sex and drugs and music to avoid his problems. now he's trying to stay on the straight and narrow.
and part of that is to be the governor's poster boy for his rehabilitation program. from the moment ellie and drix meet at the midway of the state fair, there is instant sizzle. he tries to ignore it. but the connection, the recognition that somehow this person sees the best of you is there. for both of them.
but ellie and drix have some very specific roles to play as her dad campaigns for a state senator position. and learning the truth about what happened to drix and learning the truth about what ideals her parents really hold true changes everything for ellie.
and it's all swoony and angsty and i love these characters. this feels close to ground the author has covered before with the pushing the limits series. especially with isaiah and rachel, but i don't care. it's a formula i like and enjoy.
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