Download Untouchable Audible Audio Edition Talia Hibbert Rupert Channing Audible Studios Books
What happens when a bad boy becomes a man?
Nate Davis didn't plan on returning to his hateful hometown. But then, he didn't plan on being widowed in his 20s or on his mother getting sick, either. Turns out, life doesn't give a f--k about plans.  Â
Hannah Kabbah thought her career in childcare was over. After all, no one wants a woman with a criminal damage conviction watching their kids. But when her high school crush returns to Ravenswood with two kids in tow, she gets the second chance she never dreamed of.
She also gets to know Nate - the real Nate. The one whose stony exterior hides aching vulnerability. Who makes her smile when she wants to fall apart. Who is way, way more than the bad boy persona he earned so long ago, and way too noble to ever sleep with the nanny.Â
So it's a good thing she's completely over that teenage crush, right?
Download Untouchable Audible Audio Edition Talia Hibbert Rupert Channing Audible Studios Books
"Talia Hibbert makes me cry a lot because she just writes so beautifully and captures my feelings on a page and I'm just constantly amazed by her. I don't think on page Hannah says if she's bi or pan or what label she chooses, but her attraction to multiple genders is on page. Hannah is also a prickly Queen and I love her so much. She quits her job on a rampage because an "I need to speak to the manager" customer made her mad and I loved it. It's so real. And then she gets hired by Nate to take care of his two kids. I (weirdly) wish we'd gotten a little more of the kids. I felt like they were very involved in the beginning and then kind of weren't as important in the rest of the book. But mostly I just loved this. Hannah really doesn't think Nate can possibly love her, but OF course he does. Also, Evan is my favorite. I just, he's really Chris Evans in my head, so every time he showed up I melted. Also, also, I can't wait for Zach's book later this year!"
Product details
|
Tags : Untouchable (Audible Audio Edition) Talia Hibbert, Rupert Channing, Audible Studios Books, ,Talia Hibbert, Rupert Channing, Audible Studios,Untouchable,Audible Studios,B07MWBSD7K
Untouchable Audible Audio Edition Talia Hibbert Rupert Channing Audible Studios Books Reviews :
Untouchable Audible Audio Edition Talia Hibbert Rupert Channing Audible Studios Books Reviews
- Completely enarmoreddddd by this book. I knew it the moment I finished the prologue and the story followed all the way through. It's impossible to not love hannah and nate, together, separately (but mostly together!!!!). they do the trick and they come together like magic. there was a ton of ruth, evan, and zach in this too. I really liked that. not to mention, a new character who shows up and steals hearts BIG time from their very first appearance.
noteworthy excellent body positivity and fat rep (as you know is a big part of talia's books) and mental illness (depression) rep (to the point where they have normalized conversations about it, and it's V A L I D A T I N G !!!!!), also hannah is queer (bi/pan) and references encounters with women on page.
tropes include estranged friends to lovers, single dad, employer/employee (nanny) relationship
READ THIS BOOK (and her others)! HYPE THIS AUTHOR! She puts a lot of heart and care into writing these books. I don't know her outside of her writing but the writing shines enough for itself. She cares about around the board representation, and her writing is just SO. ADDICTING!!!! - I loved the first book and I just knew I would love this one, too. Thankfully, it did not disappoint.
Hannah is an unemployable teacher due to a moment of madness on defense of her sister. That indiscretion cause her to lose her teaching license but not her love of teaching kids. When it looks like she’ll be stuck in meaningless jobs, she (literally) bumps into a new gig as a live-in nanny. But how can that work when the dad is Nate, a boy (man now) that she crushed on since elementary school?
Nate is only now back in town and trying to get his bearings. He never wanted to return but with his moms illness, his younger brother needed help caring for her and he wanted his kids to get to know her. He didn’t expect to see Hannah. He always liked her when they were younger but never said a word. Now that they’re both older and single, perhaps something can happen?
What I enjoyed about this book was the way Nate is written. He is obviously attracted to Hannah but understands the optics of falling for and perusing someone who works for you. He clearly wants her but doesn’t want her to feel obligated to reciprocate. And Hannah is just as awkward and at ease and I’ll at ease at the same time. It was lovely writing and an all around enjoyable book. - I really enjoyed this. Hannah was incredibly relatable. She has insecurities and quirks and she's funny and awkward and charming in her own way and Nate was in love with his first wife but he's stopped grieving and never gives you cause to think he might not be fully in love with Hannah. The progression of their relationship is believable and the way Nate finds Hannah's personal idiosyncracies cute is really lovable. The writing is really smooth and the author is very funny there were a lot of moments that made me laugh out loud.
- I absolutely loved this book. Hannah and Nate were both well fleshed out, complicated people. I really enjoyed watching them develop their relationship against all the odds, navigating all those akward first moments of a new relationship.
The book made me laugh out loud, it made me feel warm and fuzzy and it made me even cry a little towards the end (all happy tears, I swear!). I think this will end up being one of my favourite books of all time. - Talia Hibbert makes me cry a lot because she just writes so beautifully and captures my feelings on a page and I'm just constantly amazed by her. I don't think on page Hannah says if she's bi or pan or what label she chooses, but her attraction to multiple genders is on page. Hannah is also a prickly Queen and I love her so much. She quits her job on a rampage because an "I need to speak to the manager" customer made her mad and I loved it. It's so real. And then she gets hired by Nate to take care of his two kids. I (weirdly) wish we'd gotten a little more of the kids. I felt like they were very involved in the beginning and then kind of weren't as important in the rest of the book. But mostly I just loved this. Hannah really doesn't think Nate can possibly love her, but OF course he does. Also, Evan is my favorite. I just, he's really Chris Evans in my head, so every time he showed up I melted. Also, also, I can't wait for Zach's book later this year!
- Another winner from Talia Hibbert! Those prickly Kabbah girls can really get under your skin before you know it. This time from the prologue onward we watch how Hannah Kabbah while crushing on our hero, unbeknownst to herself thoroughly bewitched Nate without even trying.
I don’t usually go for the employee/employer romance trope. This time the execution was perfect. Hibbert did what she does so well. She moves the action.
Her vision of small town pettiness is spot on. She makes her readers care about her subjects and reveals the story through their eyes and their emotions. Perceived flaws and disability do not prohibit her characters from living their love stories, and isn’t that marvelous?
From the first book of hers that I read, I became a devotee. I look forward to more stories from Ravenswood. It’s become one of my favorite fictional locales. - The romance didn't feel as real to me here, and unfortunately Hannah and Nate didn't either. While I could really relate to her anxiety/depression, other than when she was talking about her anxiety/depression, she didn't feel natural to me. She read a little like someone's idea of a perfect nanny/detail oriented person. It's not that I didn't like her--Hannah is full of anger and insecurity, and is doing her best to hold it together, and I'd be 100% sold, but then she'd suddenly turn almost robotic and 2D, and I'd remember I'm reading a character. I still really enjoyed it, because the way Hibbert approached mental health left me near tears sometimes, but I definitely preferred A Girl Like Her.