![]() ![]() The story is a mix of friendship, romance, desire and politics. But in the end, it doesn’t matter because the plot is primarily driven by Sutton and Charlotte, anyway. I don’t know if that was intentional or if it was just me. The secondary characters were annoying in parts, to be honest. I think they fit so well together precisely because of their differences – they complement each other. I just loved the two of them in combination. Still, when Sutton enters her life, she questions her ideas about the future. ![]() ![]() Charlotte is in the middle of her life and knows exactly what she wants. Her character develops the most throughout the story. I didn’t like her that much at first, but eventually, I fell in love with her. Sutton is naïve, sometimes awkward and shy, but incredibly likeable. The focus is on 25-year-old Sutton Spencer, a literature student at NYU, and 28-year-old Charlotte Thompson, deputy mayor of New York, running for the House of Representatives. It was a rollercoaster ride to the end, and I had to shed a tear or two – no, to be honest, I was even a bit devastated because it gave me so many feelings.īut first things first. With almost 630 pages or 21 hours of listening, the author draws you into the world of 2 extraordinary characters. I think I will need a few days to process this book. The extraordinary author, Haley Cass, wrote the page-turner “Those Who Wait”, a romance novel published in 2020. ![]()
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