Claudia’s answer to “I feel that there was a good character build up on Hannah's family in Worth the Risk... is this ind…” > Likes and Comments
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Awesome news =D ^^
i just finished this and im sooo happy you said they are getting a book..i love this series and welcome the spin off
Yeah. I just finished Worth the Risk. I fell in love with the Walker Brothers and i'm happy to hear they will get their own series.
Just finished Worth the Risk and this was the main question going through my mind. I love the McKinneys, but I need more of the Walkers. It's great to know we will get that eventually.
I'm with all of you! I'm currently reading Worth the Risk after devouring Worth the Fall. I love my McKinney boys, but I'd happily read the Walkers!
Ok, but ... did no one else think it was SUPER problematic that Mia was Hannah's therapist, when she had a prior personal relationship with Hannah? That's a huge ethical boundary to cross. Usually you can't even be someone's counselor or therapist if they're a friend of a friend, and definitely not if you are personal friends with them. It's frustrating, because I loved the book otherwise, and Nick and Mia were great characters, but ... as written, Mia is a terrible therapist, and that really pulled me out of the action of the book, ever time she was in a scene with Hannah. http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives...
Gene - I think that it can depend on the situation. In Hannah's case, I think Claudia Connor's did show both the positive and negative results of what can happen to a therapist that takes that leap across the boundary.
On one hand, being able to have someone professionally trained who also had an established bond with her probably allowed her to be more open with many things. It may have allowed her to feel safer and with what she went through with a stranger, not having Mia around could have potentially set Hannah back.
At the same time, due to her not being able to reveal certain things probably helped create or widen a rift between her (Mia) and Nick. Which led to, later, Hannah having to deal with guilt at knowing she was at least a stressor, if not the reason, for the break.
Overall, I look forward to seeing if or/and how the author portrays this in her spin off.
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Feb 12, 2015 05:28AM
Awesome news =D ^^
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i just finished this and im sooo happy you said they are getting a book..i love this series and welcome the spin off
Yeah. I just finished Worth the Risk. I fell in love with the Walker Brothers and i'm happy to hear they will get their own series.
Just finished Worth the Risk and this was the main question going through my mind. I love the McKinneys, but I need more of the Walkers. It's great to know we will get that eventually.
I'm with all of you! I'm currently reading Worth the Risk after devouring Worth the Fall. I love my McKinney boys, but I'd happily read the Walkers!
Ok, but ... did no one else think it was SUPER problematic that Mia was Hannah's therapist, when she had a prior personal relationship with Hannah? That's a huge ethical boundary to cross. Usually you can't even be someone's counselor or therapist if they're a friend of a friend, and definitely not if you are personal friends with them. It's frustrating, because I loved the book otherwise, and Nick and Mia were great characters, but ... as written, Mia is a terrible therapist, and that really pulled me out of the action of the book, ever time she was in a scene with Hannah. http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives...
Gene - I think that it can depend on the situation. In Hannah's case, I think Claudia Connor's did show both the positive and negative results of what can happen to a therapist that takes that leap across the boundary. On one hand, being able to have someone professionally trained who also had an established bond with her probably allowed her to be more open with many things. It may have allowed her to feel safer and with what she went through with a stranger, not having Mia around could have potentially set Hannah back.
At the same time, due to her not being able to reveal certain things probably helped create or widen a rift between her (Mia) and Nick. Which led to, later, Hannah having to deal with guilt at knowing she was at least a stressor, if not the reason, for the break.
Overall, I look forward to seeing if or/and how the author portrays this in her spin off.



