For the Right Reasons
America's Favorite Bachelor on Faith, Love, Marriage, and Why Nice Guys Finish First
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4.3 • 22 Ratings
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
The “virgin Bachelor” Sean Lowe reveals the challenges of finding love while championing his Christian convictions in the morally complex world of reality TV.
After The Bachelorette broke his heart, Sean Lowe suspected his “nice guy” image hurt him. The show never emphasized it, but Sean committed to living according to biblical standards of sexuality, even as producers emphasized the risqué and promiscuous. A Texas boy from a Baptist home, Sean tells the story of how he went from a Division I college football player to a fan favorite on reality television, taking readers behind the scenes of The Bachelor and The Bachelorette to see the challenges of living out his values and faith—and ultimately winning his true love’s heart.
For the Right Reasons is about the journeys we all have to take in the real world, where being “good” is the right thing to do but sometimes doesn’t seem to be enough; where betrayal is commonplace; and where that thing called perfection is actually just a cruel myth. Sean learned a few things from his two seasons on the hottest romance shows on television, and he wants others to benefit from those lessons: good does eventually win, lies will be discovered, and “nice guys” do ultimately finish first.
Customer Reviews
I read it in 1 sitting
It was an amazing book, i learned lots from it. It was a book that was continuosly interesting. His feelings towards catherine are amazing and i love them as a couple
Missing Something
I'm a Bachelor/Bachelorette fan so I decided to give Sean's book a read. I found it really dry, kinda boring and as soon as you thought it was getting juicy, it went right back to "church talk". He seems like a good guy but I have to admit, at times I found him kind of hypocritical. Plus I felt bad for his wife if she read it!! He goes into detail about loving two other women and how leaving/losing them was the biggest mistake. Could of been worded better.