![]() It’s true that this is an exaggeration of what happens in business, but threading through the story of Polly and Damon is the story of the reconciliation of two diametrically opposed management styles. Damon is driven, hard, and he practices the “hot desk” system, where an employee doesn’t have a permanent workstation, but uses the first available empty desk. Polly Prince is the lynchpin of a small but successful advertising agency when her company is taken over by businessman Damon Doukakis. This one is no different and I had fun with this book. ![]() Although she uses the usual Harlequin/Mills and Boon tropes, she uses them intelligently, to illuminate the characters, rather than by rote, to get through a story. Sarah Morgan writes books about poor but feisty heroines and rich but unjerky heroes. ![]() LynneC’s review of Doukakis’s Apprenticeby Sarah MorganĬontemporary Romance published by Harlequin Presents 20 Sept 11 ![]()
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