
The Fiancé Dilemma by Elena Armas
𝒞𝑜𝓃𝓉𝑒𝓃𝓉:
fake engagement, small town, sister’s best friend, he falls first, chaotic heroine
I really wanted to love this book but the female main character was getting on my last nerve! She was insufferable. Her quirks was just too much. To make matters worse, the plot was ridiculously slow for me. The main characters had absolutely no sparkles. Sadly, this was a big miss for me. But I think fans of Elena Armas may like this, so don’t let my review sway you from giving it a go, read it for yourself and see what you think.
“There was never a choice. I don’t give a shit how corny or cliché this sounds, but I knew when I saw her, and I know now more than ever before. I don’t need her to walk down an aisle, wear my ring, or sign her name on a dotted line. she’s my happy. the rest is only important when you need it and everyone should fucking know that.”
“Beautiful things shouldn’t be boxed. It eventually dims their light.”
Blurb
Josie Moore has given the opposite sex—and love—plenty of chances. Four exactly, if you count all her failed engagements, and five if you include the absentee father who kept her existence a secret until very recently. So when her father decides to announce his retirement with a splashy magazine piece about the family, Josie realizes her romantic history is a complicated PR issue.
Matthew Flanagan is in the mud, literally. Not only has he been fired from his job, but also the tires of his car are stuck in the muck after taking a wrong turn as he enters Green Oak, North Carolina. So, he grabs a duffel with his essentials and goes in search of a place to crash until he gets his life back on track. But instead, he finds his best friend’s sister, Josie, greeting him as her fiancé.
What starts as a big messy misunderstanding quickly turns into an arrangement with Matthew playing a new role as doting fiancé. A fifth engagement—and a stunt, at that—makes Josie’s stomach turn, but every dilemma requires a choice between equally undesirable alternatives, and Matthew doesn’t seem to mind becoming one more number in a colorful list of grooms-that-never-were. Despite the ring on her finger, Josie knows this is only temporary, even if the rest of the small town believes that the fifth time’s the charm.


2 Comments
Alison
I won’t be reading this but need to read some of your 5 Stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
shesaidyestobooks
Yes, you absolutely do!