Dependency on April doesn’t sit well with him at all. Which now means that instead of just being able to keep on spending and doing what he was used to doing, George must depend on April's generously. George is jealous of April after she inherits everything from her grandfather’s death. Richie is a spoiled young man, who mostly does what his father, George, tells him to do. Love from A to Z has villains as well in the characters of Richie and Uncle George. Zach is a gorgeous man who loves to play and doesn’t really want to grow up. April is great both when she’s amnesic and after she recovers her memory. The story also manages to be sweet and very romantic with the explicit-sex scenes peppering the pages. It feels right – at least this reader thinks so. And somehow the fact that they just met, even how they met, doesn’t lessen the intensity between them. There are some very visual scenes between April and Zack as they embark on their sexual journey, which set the pages on fire. The reader is immediately immersed in Zach's playfulness. When April wakes up on Saturday morning, next to Zach, she has no idea who he or she is. Forte’s Love from A to Z is a book about new beginnings and operates on insomnia. Love from A to Z is playful and light, with some darker undertones as well. This review was originally posted on (un)Conventional Bookviews
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