The Flyaways - Review

The Flyaways
An Erotic Women’s Fiction Novella
A.R. Hadley
March 13th, 2019
Chameleon Productions

Holly’s life changes the moment she steps foot into his classroom.

Set in Daytona Beach and spanning two semesters of college, is the story of bright, young student, Holly Kerr, her beautiful Professor Kelley Nicolo and the forbidden games they play when they fall in love … despite his marriage and their vast differences.

Or maybe they’re more alike than they realize. Souls searching day and night, never resting … flyaways lost and looking for a place to land.

The Flyaways is a 30,000-word novella.

Amount of sex 4.5 / 5
How explicit are the sex scenes 4.5 / 5
Story 4 / 5
Overall: 4 / 5

I enjoy reading forbidden romances, and student/teacher relationships are one type that I have seen a lot of. Even though this is true, I was intrigued by The Flyaways description and jumped into Holly and Kelley’s story.  I was slightly taken off guard by the writing.  I guess I was expecting a typical college romance, but The Flyaways was different with more of a poetic flare.

In this story, Kelley Nicolo is a professor of literature, and Holly Kerr is a student in his class.  They have a pretty strong chemistry, but he is married and has a baby.  This doesn’t seem to deter either of them, and they were not very subtle with their affairs.  And let me tell you, their sex scenes were blazing hot!

I had a difficult time connecting to the characters, and I was completely thrown off by the ending. The Flyaways was an overall good story, I just had a hard time getting over the cheating. If that is something that doesn’t bother you, I would totally recommend The Flyaways.

Voluntarily Reviewed an Advanced Copy

A.R. Hadley writes imperfectly perfect sentences by the light of her iPhone.
She loves her husband.
Chocolate.
Her children.
And Cary Grant.
She annoys those darling little children by quoting lines from Back to the Future, but despite her knowledge of eighties and nineties pop culture, she was actually meant to live alongside the Lost Generation after the Great War and write a mediocre novel while drinking absinthe with Hemingway. Instead, find her sipping sweet tea with extra lemons on her porch as she weaves fictional tales of love and angst amid reality.

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