Moonlight over manhattan read online free no download
Ethan thought he was used to chaos, until he met Madi—how can one tiny dog cause such mayhem? To Ethan, the solution is simple—he will pay Harriet to share his New York apartment and provide twenty-four-hour care. But when his dog-sitting duties are over and Harriet returns to her own home, will she dare to take the biggest challenge of all—letting Ethan know he has her heart for life, not just for Christmas? At the start of this endearing holiday romance, the sixth in Morgan's From Manhattan with Love series after Holiday in the Hamptons , shy dog-walker Harriett Knight winds up in the ER with a twisted ankle, sustained while escaping a date gone awry.
Ethan Black is used to argumentative patients who threaten to sue him, so he's pleasantly surprised by Harriett's easy acceptance of his advice. Have a question? Check our FAQ page to see if it's already answered there. Seasoned Moonlight user? Give back to the community by joining our Discord and helping other users.
It's good for you to be reminded that you're not all-powerful. I must admit after New York, Actually and Holiday in the Hamptons failed to hit the heights of the first three books in the From Manhattan with Love series, I did go into this with some trepidation. And I was so pleased to discover that Harriet and Ethan brought back some of the Sarah Morgan magic that's been hiding from me. This was very much a book that grew on me as the story progressed, as did Harriet and Ethan with a chemistry which very much builds as they get to know one another.
He's not an easy nut to crack and there were times when I wanted to shake him but, after a wobbly start, Harriet begins to bring out the best in him.
As he does her and if you've ever suffered from shyness, then you can't not feel an affinity to Harriet. Ivana - Diary of Difference. Wonderful book, full of love, joy, dogs and Christmas spirit. I really loved Harriet and Ethan's characters and I fell in love with both of them.
Wonderful book! Harriet is the shy one of the Knight siblings, having struggled with a stutter when she was young she was used to her brother and sister running interference in high-stress situations. With a determination to take life by the horns, she embarks on an experiment: Challenge Harriet: Do the opposite of what the old Harriet would do, and come out of her shell.
I just loved this romance! The book description makes the story sound all light-hearted, and superficial fun, but Moonlight Over Manhattan was wonderfully full of emotions! Harriet and Ethan were lovely, well-formed characters that I grew attached to. I wanted nothing but happiness for them; together, of course! A copy was kindly provided by HQN via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. This review is also posted at The Readers Den. With Fliss now settled in the Hamptons with her husband, Harriet feels somewhat adrift, and is determined to forge a new path for herself and take charge of her life.
One of those challenges is to go on dates. Or so he thinks. Ethan prides himself on his even-temperedness and his ability to remain calm in a crisis, but this is too much and he explodes — and Harriet, furious that he could be so unconcerned for the dog, dishes it right back.
Harriet is unsure at first. But given they both want different things from life, anything long-term between them is off the table. On the whole though, I enjoyed watching her grow in confidence as she worked out what she wanted and what she deserved from life.
She was the sort of woman men wanted to help. Not the sort they wanted to help themselves too… Sarah gave me the slow build, the simmering chemistry, and the burning emotional connection that I have come to expect from her writing with this couple, and things progress between them at a steady pace, all played out around the care of a highly strung dog, meddling colleagues, friends and family.
But I do think this series has run its course now in all honesty, and stopping with Moonlight Over Manhattan would certainly close it out on a high point. ARC generously provided via Netgalley, in exchange for the above honest review. Displaying 1 - 10 of reviews.
Join the discussion. Here lies Harriet, who knew a lot about hair balls, but not a whole lot about the other kind. How to make herself small, if not exactly invisible. Plenty of people, including her twin sister and her brother, would say she had good reason for that.
Whatever reasons lay in her past, she lived a small life and she was uncomfortably aware that she kept it that way through choice. Not the curse. For her, the F word was Fear. Fear of humiliation, fear of failing, fear of what other people thought of her, and all those fears originated from fear of her father. For the month between Thanksgiving and Christmas, she would do one thing every day that scared her, or at least made her uncomfortable.
She was going to emerge from the challenge a new, improved version of herself. More confident. Which was why she was now hanging out of a bathroom window being supported by her new best friend Natalie. It might be safer to keep them on my feet, Natalie. And give me your purse. Harriet clung to it. This was New York City. She would no more hand her purse to a stranger than she would walk naked through Central Park.
It went against every instinct she had. She was the type of person who looked twice before she crossed the road, who checked the lock on her door before she went to sleep. Forcing down the side of her that wanted to clutch the purse to her chest and never let it go, she thrust it at Nat.
And drop it down to me. What if she ran off with it? Used all her credit cards? Stole her identity? If Nat wanted to steal her identity, she was welcome to it. She was more than ready to be someone else. Through the open window she could hear the roar of traffic, the cacophony of horns, the squealing of brakes, the background rumble that was New York City.
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