![]() I wanted to love this book the same way that I wanted to love Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, and in some ways, I did love The Kiss Quotient. They agree to work together, each hiding secrets that the other is afraid to admit they already know about– and don’t mind at all. Except Michael, her escort, quickly learns that Stella’s problem isn’t that she’s bad at sex– she just needs a partner who will be considerate of her autism. ![]() So she hires a male escort to help hone her skills before she approaches a coworker who she thinks might be a good match. ![]() ![]() When her parents start making comments about grandchildren and suggesting help finding her dates, Stella decides to take matters into her own hands before they get too carried away. She’s rich, and up for a new promotion– but her love life is lacking. Bonus: the hero is mixed-race.Ībout the book: Stella Lane is a phenomenal econometrician– which means she analyses what people buy, and creates algorithms to help sales companies suggest future purchases to their consumers. ![]() The draw: the heroine of the story is a woman with autism, in a gender-swapped Pretty Woman love story. In the meantime, I borrowed a copy of another BOTM selection, Helen Hoang’s new adult romance novel, The Kiss Quotient. So my actual Book of the Month Club selection this month was Michael Rutger’s The Anomaly, but it’s set in the Grand Canyon, which I’m visiting later this summer so I’m putting that on hold for now. ![]()
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