But mostly I was skeptical of the fact that our heroine created an app about boyfriend fails yet has no idea her boyfriend of four years regularly cheats on her. I didn’t know if I could stomach another book about rich verses poor. I was turned off by the big chip on Cooper’s shoulder. When I started Good Girl Complex, I was very much on the fence. But you sucked me in with all your angst and drama. I tried so hard not to like this book about beautiful, wealthy, privileged college kids who fall for sexy, troubled, tattooed working class locals. But as Mac finally starts feeling accepted by Cooper and his friends, the secret he’s been keeping from her threatens the only place she’s ever felt at home. Their friendship soon becomes the realest thing in her life.ĭespite his disdain for the trust-fund kids he sees coming and going from his town, Cooper soon realizes Mac isn’t just another rich clone and falls for her. Mac’s had plenty of practice suppressing her wilder impulses, but when she meets local bad boy Cooper Hartley, that ability is suddenly tested. That means moving to the beachside town of Avalon Bay, a community made up of locals and the wealthy students of Garnet College. Unlike most twenty-year-olds, all she really wants to do is focus on growing her internet business, but first she must get a college degree at her parents’ insistence. It’s exhausting, really, always following the rules. Mackenzie “Mac” Cabot is a people pleaser.
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