In this second book in New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Cora Carmack’s New Adult, Texas-set Rusk University series, which began with All Lined Up, a young woman discovers that you can’t only fight for what you believe in . . . sometimes you have to fight for what you love
Dylan fights for lost causes. Probably because she used to be one.
Environmental issues, civil rights, corrupt corporations, and politicians—you name it, she’s probably been involved in a protest. When her latest cause lands her in jail overnight, she meets Silas Moore. He’s in for a different kind of fighting. And though he’s arrogant and infuriating, she can’t help being fascinated with him. Yet another lost cause.
Football and trouble are the only things that have ever come naturally to Silas. And it’s trouble that lands him in a cell next to do-gooder Dylan. He’s met girls like her before—fixers, he calls them, desperate to heal the damage and make him into their ideal boyfriend. But he doesn’t think he’s broken, and he definitely doesn’t need a girlfriend trying to change him. Until, that is, his anger issues and rash decisions threaten the only thing he really cares about, his spot on the Rusk University football team. Dylan might just be the perfect girl to help.
Because Silas Moore needs some fixing after all.
So Carson completely stole my heart in All Lined Up. Just so happens, Salis completely melted my heart in All Broken Down. And Salis wasted no time
with Dylan. Their chemistry was hot and heavy from the beginning. No nice build
up like Carson and Dallas - it was just BAM!
Can I also just say I want to be Dylan when I grow up? She
is like the ideal girl I think college women should be looking up to. She
stands up for what she thinks is right and doesn’t keep her thoughts to herself
(even when she probably should).
I also love how Cora Carmack embraces the sentiment that
college is the time to find yourself with her characters. Both Salis and Dylan
had rough starts growing up and have found each other at a time when they’re
both struggling to continue to pretend to be the people they think they have to
be to fit in or survive.
Once again – Cora Carmack knows how to right a Texas
Football novel.





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