Molly O'Keefe has always known she wanted to be a writer (except when she wanted to be a florist or a chef and the brief period of time when she considered being a cowgirl). And once she got her hands on some romances, she knew exactly what she wanted to write.
She published her first Harlequin romance at age 25 and hasn't looked back. She loves exploring every character's road towards happily ever after.
Originally from a small town outside of Chicago, she went to university in St. Louis where she met and fell in love with the editor of her school newspaper. They followed each other around the world for several years and finally got married and settled down in Toronto, Ontario. They welcomed their son into their family in 2006, and their daughter in 2008. When she's not at the park or cleaning up the toy room, Molly is working hard on her next novel, trying to exercise, stalking Tina Fey on the internet and dreaming of the day she can finish a cup of coffee without interruption.
Light, fluffy fun. Nice romantic comedy feel without descending into brain-bleed inducing Funny Ha Ha Slapstick territory. It didn't change my life, but it was a pleasant diversion while I was reading it.
A terrible choice for a lunch time read. There was so much goodness in one little book. Characters who cook. Enemies to lovers trope. And that mysterious alchemy I've noted to friends where in a woman will not find a guy physically attractive, but once she likes him, suddenly he has great eyes or the perfect smile or strong, capable hands. It was really hard to put it down and go back to work.
This was a cute book. The first half of the book was good, when the main characters were building character. Overall the book was lacking a plot and the romance fizzled out at the end for me.
As a thesis I will give this a four, although I was not as impressed with it as a book. Absolutely, an excellent resource on how to write a thesis; I suspect you will not have her resources.