Senin, 07 April 2014

[K318.Ebook] Download Collide, by Gail McHugh

Download Collide, by Gail McHugh

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Collide, by Gail McHugh

Collide, by Gail McHugh



Collide, by Gail McHugh

Download Collide, by Gail McHugh

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Collide, by Gail McHugh

A missed first encounter....

Colliding with a second chance....

On the heels of graduating college and trying to cope with her mother's death, Emily Cooper moves to New York City for a fresh start.

While harboring secrets of his own, Dillon Parker takes care of Emily through her grief. Knowing he can't live without her by his side, he's sweet, thoughtful, and everything Emily has ever wanted in a man.

Until she meets Gavin Blake - a rich and notorious playboy who is dangerously sexy and charming as hell. Emily tries to deny the instant connection she feels, but Mr. Tall, Dark, and Handsome is not inclined to let go so easily. Recovering from his own painful past, Gavin will stop at nothing to win Emily over.

This unexpected encounter compels Emily to question her decisions, forcing her to make a choice that will destroy friendships, shatter hearts, and forever change her life.

  • Sales Rank: #23703 in Audible
  • Published on: 2013-08-15
  • Format: Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Running time: 702 minutes

Most helpful customer reviews

266 of 308 people found the following review helpful.
Amazing yet annoying
By rickshel
Spoiler alert!
I am so confused by all these great reviews people are sending in. Yes this was an amazing book but did no one else understand how freaking stupid Emily was? She stayed with a man who lied to her and cheated on her through the whole book when there was a compassionate and in love guy right Infront of her! Thats the thing that I loved about this book, Gavin. But the fact that Emily was so stupid just really made me annoyed with this book. And the ending was awful! She actually listens to what Dillion ORDERS her to do? Does she not realize when a guy has a awful drinking problem and when he is ordering you to do something you should leave him. And another thing even if she didnt beleive Gavin why does she immdeiantly go to freaking Dillion? Why can't she just take a break before running straight back to the guy who hit her!? I realize I'm ranting and I'm sorry but Im mad that this book was so amazing with the love Gavin gave her but I'm also so annoyed that Emily was a very stupid chatector.

317 of 373 people found the following review helpful.
No
By Lisa Santos
I can't compute how annoyed I am with books like these. I wanted to like it. I buy books like these for a reason; easy, light reads I can read between studying, classes, work, and boyfriend time. Sometime you get lucky with one that is actually awesome and takes you on a higher level of enjoyment and you HAVE to devour. Collide is absolutely nothing original. I DESPISE books like these that add in miscommunication for the sake of prolonging the story and drama. I HATE IT!!! It's unoriginal and annoying.
The female protagonist is ridiculous and got to be way too much toward halfway through. I guess I have a different mentality, but a man telling me "YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO HANG OUT WITH THIS GIRL BECAUSE SHE HAS PIERCINGS AND IS DRESSED WEIRD" would make me laugh and tell him to gtfo of my house not cower and nod. It was mentioned once of twice that the girl has abandonment issues and she didn't want to find a guy like her father. UMMMM DOESN'T SEEM LIKE YOU'RE ON THE RIGHT TRACK, SWEETHEART! The waffling got to be too much and the "I can't deal with this, I'm gonna throw up! I can't speak to him because blahblahblahblah..." makes me clinge. Please, stop with the forced drama and weak women.

I guess this book just wasn't for me from the beginning because I'm not a "love at first sight" kind of girl. Lust, sure. Love? Yeah..no.

Not to mention the sex scenes were not steamy or hot (there is a lot of wall sex). I get it, we all have a favorite position but if you're going to write basically the same scene over and over again, it's gonna get boring. - So, no saving grace there. Plus the whole *spoiler* cheating thing is completely disgusting to me. Can we talk about the biggest thing for me: unprotected sex with just anyone. Awesome. Really. "I'm on the pill." Oh! Great! So the hoards of other females Gavin had sex with plus, Dillion who cheated on you who knows how many times but you've been having unprotected sex with...there's really no possibilty of STDs. Right. But she's on the pill. So it's all good.

This author did not impress me at all and I will NOT be purchasing more of her stories. Seriously what's with Amazon reviews lately? It's so difficult for me to find books now because I have hardly any trust in these five star ratings. Give me a break. People are too easy with these ratings.

Another book? Really. Okay. People are getting crazy with these sequels.

*Pardon the caps lock, I just finished reading the book and am a little peeved.* *annoyed face* *angry face* *sad face*

65 of 84 people found the following review helpful.
Absolute Frustration
By Miss H
Spoilers are likely, so if that isn't your thing, feel free to ignore this review entirely.

I should’ve put this book down and spared myself a headache. While I didn’t hate it, I certainly didn’t love it, either. Actually, I take that back. It was pretty awful.

Where to start with this mess? I cannot begin to explain how ridiculously annoying it is when a character laughs with almost everything they say, as if every word out of their mouth is funny enough to warrant a laugh. Not to mention the fact that, in this case, it was used as a dialogue tag. That’s amateur writing at its finest. “Laughed” isn’t a dialogue tag. It’s an action tag. This means that it should be punctuated differently. You can’t speak an action. A period is needed as a separator between the action and the dialogue, not a comma.

While I had many issues with this book, the biggest annoyance for me was Emily herself. The girl was a martyr to the extreme. I don’t care how much Dillon, her boyfriend, did for her in the past. That doesn’t give him free rein to treat her like crap. She allowed him to treat her this way, even making excuses for herself by claiming that she didn’t have anyone from her past with whom to compare his behavior. I understand she took care of her mom while she was sick, but she’s a 24-year-old woman. I find it hard to believe that she never dated, not once before her mom got sick since, you know, everyone in the book couldn’t shut up about how beautiful she was. All that aside, I thought she was a weak, spineless woman who couldn’t seem to function without a man to take care of her. Dillon manipulated her at every turn because she allowed it. She wasn’t blind to his many faults because she was na�ve. She was blind because she refused to accept what was right in front of her face. Everyone could see Dillon for who he truly was, everyone but her. She accepted every excuse he threw at her. If only the same applied for Gavin. She wouldn’t even give him the courtesy of allowing him to explain himself to her.

Dillon was possessive, controlling, and manipulative. I didn't understand what Emily saw in him. I didn't find him all that appealing, not even before he started showing his true colors. He had d-bag written all over him.

"'So you went swimming I see,' Dillon remarked, peeling the shirt from his body as he and Emily entered their room. Closing the door behind him, he shed the rest of his clothing and tossed them into a pile.

'Very good observation,' she laughed.

Dillon walked into the bathroom, turned on the shower, and got in. 'I hope you kept the body that belongs to me covered up around my friend,' he called out.

[...]

'You’re not answering me, Emily. Did you cover yourself up?'

Walking into the bathroom, she let out a frustrated sigh. 'Dillon, what do you see right now?' she asked, motioning her hand over her body, her voice a touch irritated by his question. It was clear to her that she wasn’t baring too much skin.

'What do I see right now? I see my hot girlfriend’s a$$ hanging out from beneath her college T-shirt. So why don’t you get in the shower and give your man what he needs?'"

That’s a great boyfriend she’s got there. Good Lord, did he expect her to go swimming fully clothed? I’m surprised he didn’t lock her away in his room the whole time to prevent anyone from looking at his property. That’s exactly how he treats her—like an object he owns.

Later on, Emily’s reaction to that particular scene made me rage.

"After downing a shot of tequila, a slight pang of guilt for not giving Dillon the little he had asked from her hit the pit of her stomach. He’d emotionally taken care of her through the most difficult time in her life, constantly complimented her on a daily basis—whether it be about her physical or educational attributes—and made her want for nothing financially. Sex in someone’s home—be it crowded or not—shouldn’t have been an issue in her mind."

She actually felt guilty for turning him down for sex. This girl isn’t emotionally mature enough to be in a relationship at all, let alone with someone who so easily manipulates her.

Olivia, Emily’s friend, said it best:

“First, you need to stop feeling like you’re completely indebted to Dumba$$, Emily. He did what any good boyfriend would’ve done. Nothing special.”

Between Dillon and Gavin, the obvious choice is Gavin, but he’s certainly nothing special to write home about. Sadly, he just didn’t do it for me. I mean, sure, he was sweet and all, but after a while, I just felt sorry for him. He was kind of pathetic, if I’m being honest, letting Emily walk all over him and play her little games. He went on and on about the connection he had with Emily, how she was meant to be his, yet had no problem lying to her face on Dillon’s behalf. To his credit, he did eventually come clean, but, by that point, I was over his cowardice. He talked a big game, but that was about it—all talk, no action. I didn’t understand why he and Dillon were even friends. I wouldn’t even call what they had a real friendship. He more or less tolerated Dillon for reasons unknown. I don’t know why Gavin put up with Dillon. I don’t know why he did a lot of the things he did.

Overall, I felt that the characters weren’t fully developed. I couldn’t really connect with them. Then again, maybe it’s because I have very little patience for stupidity, and these characters were beyond stupid—every last one of them.

I found the book as a whole to be somewhat boring, and by somewhat I mean completely. It was melodramatic, predictable, and overly long and wordy. The plot relied too heavily on contrived miscommunication and misunderstandings. Basically, it was angst for the sake of angst. It had potential, but fell short on delivery.

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