Beard in Mind
Winston Brothers 4
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4.5 • 82 Ratings
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
USA TODAY BESTSELLER
All is fair in love and auto maintenance.
Beau Winston is the nicest, most accommodating guy in the world. Usually.
Handsome as the devil and twice as charismatic, Beau lives a charmed life as everyone’s favorite Winston Brother. But since his twin decided to leave town, and his other brother hired a stunning human-porcupine hybrid as a replacement mechanic for their auto shop, Beau Winston’s charmed life has gone to hell in a handbasket.
Shelly Sullivan is not nice and is never accommodating. Ever.
She mumbles to herself, but won’t respond when asked a question. She glares at everyone, especially babies. She won’t shake hands with or touch another person, but has no problems cuddling with a dog. And her damn parrot speaks only in curse words.
Beau wants her gone. He wants her out of his auto shop, out of Tennessee, and out of his life.
The only problem is, learning why this porcupine wears her coat of spikes opens a Pandora’s box of complexity—exquisite, tempting, heartbreaking complexity—and Beau Winston soon discovers being nice and accommodating might mean losing what matters most.
Customer Reviews
Beautiful
Another beautifully written story by this author. This book is heavy laden with mental health issues which may not appeal to all and made this story in the series quite different. The ending of the book was so beautiful and unexpected, so moving. Loved it!
Beard in Mind
I just want to start by saying BiM was amazing. I'm the type of reader that gets bored easily or will speed read a book just to find out what happens. BiM was totally different for me. Thanks to my daughter waking at 3am, a notification from iBooks that it was available and hubby looking after the kids I read it in a day but at no time did I feel the need to rush through or skip to the end to see what happened. Beau and Shelly are such great characters and so different from what I thought they would be like. This book is the literal embodiment of you can't judge a book or character by their outward appearance. The way that mental illness is dealt with in this book is thoughtful and respectful. Without giving away too much this book is heartbreaking, thought provoking, uplifting, laugh out loud funny and honestly one of the best I have ever read.