

This book centered around Delaney who left Truly, Idaho at 18 and never looked back. Maybe if it had only been for half the book and then he reformed but 95% of the book was him being an A** and then a quick oh I'm sorry at the end was supposed to make it all okay? Not for me. Yep, he had some crappy stuff happen as a kid and I totally understood why he never wanted to make amends with Henry but his complete disrespect for women including Delaney was just too strong.

They have engaging characters and lots of humor. I usually really enjoy Rachel Gibson's books. Gibson wisely focuses her attention on clever dialogue and original situations, and the overall result is a delightful and completely entertaining read.

Delaney's unqualified disgust for Truly becomes a tired mantra and no amount of biker jackets and muttered "wild things" can neutralize Nick's anachronistic womanizing. While each page brings a new take on the familiar "black sheep, old flame" plot, the main characters are at times a bit unappealing. Truly Madly Yours has the same originality and sauciness that made Rachel Gibson's first work, Simply Irresistible, popular with readers. But when the two find themselves in close proximity, all their best intentions fly out the window and intense passion consumes them. Nick's reputation as a ladies man hasn't changed, either, and Delaney reminds herself that he can love her and leave her just as brutally as he did 10 years ago. Gossip nears the truth as the sexual sparks fly between Nick and Delaney. Small-town life is everything that Delaney fears it to be: high school rivalries and old rumors about Delaney and Nick resurrect themselves with predictable immediacy. What's a girl to do? Delaney digs in, starts up a hair salon and prepares to grit her teeth for as long as it takes. But Henry had other plans in mind: Nick and Delaney's inheritance is contingent on her staying in Truly for a year, and him having no "sexual relationship" with Delaney. Even the pleas of her mother and the tension of an unfinished fling with Henry's bastard son, Nick Allegrezza, can't keep her in Truly, Idaho. Delaney Shaw plans to get in and out of her hometown in the time it takes to attend her stepfather Henry's funeral, read the will, and refill the tank of her Miata.
