![]() This novel hit all the high points: Dramatic hospital scenes. ![]() The ending was less than empowering for women who work high-impact careers. The flawed logic and bizarre character choices that buoyed the plot were further burdened by soapy subplots and cliches. I couldn’t suspend my disbelief for this, I’m afraid. His actions would have been more believable had he been an insurance salesman, a retail manager, or a realtor. ![]() Meanwhile, Cooper was also a doctor and met Dylan in medical school, so he should have been familiar with the sorts of grueling hours and hard work needed to be a doctor. He tells Dylan that all of his friends were getting married and having children, and he didn’t want to be a first-time father at forty. ![]() His reasoning is that Dylan was always working and never at home with him and could never find the time to spend with him. The story devolves into something of a soap opera when Cooper confesses to Dylan that he had a one-night stand with a female bartender. Perfectly Undone starts out as an interesting concept: A woman, Dylan, in the prime of her career as a doctor grapples with her role in her sister’s death, struggles to get a research grant, and tries to find balance between her career and her relationship with her boyfriend, Cooper. ![]()
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