Ratings4
Average rating3.9
What's life like on the tenure track? For Assistant Professor of Sociology, Dr. Deja Evans, it sucks. Hard. Every day. Between the class prep, the meetings, grading student work, trying to find time to complete her own research and the meetings, she didn't have a life, she had a digital calendar that decided whether she got to wallow in her feelings at 3pm or 7pm, on Thursday or maybe Sunday. And the worst meeting of them all was the two-and-a-half-hour, once a month Faculty Senate, which was drier than her dating life, duller than her skin in winter and far longer than her attention span. The only thing that made those never-ending Faculty Senate meetings bearable was watching Dr. Alejandro Mendoza, Associate Professor of History, breathe. For years, Deja had harbored a kind of secret crush on the sexiest man on campus never thinking that he would ever feel the same, until one unexpected day, they have a steamy after hours encounter in her office and suddenly her life seems much more exciting. That lasts about half a minute. Over the course of a hectic academic year, Deja tries to survive her classes, help her students, prepare herself for her third-year review, and most important of all, she has to learn how to get out of her own way and just let Alejandro love her.
Reviews with the most likes.
Academia is trash and this book kinda goes into the harsh parts of the whole gig. But also the female lead's insecurities had me rolling my eyes a lot lol sorry
Loved Deja and Alejandro. Loved the depiction of academia. What I didn't like so much was that the two main antagonists were women. I would have liked a bit more balance in that department as I feel like romance novels often villainises women who are not the heroine or in the heroine's inner circle. This however is a bit balanced by the strong female relationships depicted in the book.
This was yummy.
Alejandro was as perfect as Deja described him to be in the first chapter. He was PERFECTION. Deja was perfect too; the problem: she didn't know it. Deja was bogged down with all of the pressures that land on our shoulders when we feel too much and need to do too much because it's expected too much.
It was nice to experience their growth as a couple and individual growth. This was just wholesome and I totally appreciated the absence of a third scene break up. THANK YOU!! I didn't need it or want it and it wasn't lacking!
I'm sure I'll re-read this one soon enough.