All In: Full Tilt #2
A**
5 Big Something Stars
Hello epic book hangover. That's it. I'm done.This series has captured my heart and wrecked it, yet I can't help and want to start at the beginning right now. I'm in love with the whole lot of main and secondary cast and I just missed them ten minutes after closing the book. I'm trying to keep this review as spoiler-free as possible but if you haven't read Full Tilt yet...what are you waiting for?Theo is angry at the world for having his brother taken away. Despite it all, he shoulders the tasks of taking care of his frail mother, going back to school for a business degree and dealing with his father's displeasure about his choice of career. Six months ago he made his brother Jonah a promise. Two weeks later this promise slipped away and he hasn't been able to locate Kacey since, the feeling that he has failed Jonah always present. Until a well-meaning bartender tracks him down and asks him to take care of his late brother's girlfriend.Kacey's escape from the place with too many memories was silent. She drove all the way down to New Orleans only to play her songs about Jonah at bars. Booze back on the menu she drinks herself into oblivion. Day after day, night after night, not being able to function without being numb. She sees the gaping abyss in front of her but can't pull away. When she sees Theo again after six months the reunion isn't joyful. She is full of shame, guilt and regret but Theo gives her a reality check and she knows she has to get her life back on track.Teddy finds solace and comfort in his brother's legacy at the exhibit so he ventures there to talk to his brother whenever he feels unsettled. He is the kind of person who tries to carry the weight of everybody's problems, being the rock everybody leans on to.Theo wasn't only there for Jonah during the worst moments of his life. He was there for a lot of other people, too. Taking their pain, listening to it, deconstructing it. Turning it around and giving it back to them as a piece of art. Uniquely their own, just as pain is unique to the person who bears it.Where Jonah was light and love, Teddy is something else entirely. He is fierce and passion and not as open. He has walls in place but when they crumble he is magnificent.Kacey is such an endearing heroine. I adore her. She is sweet, soft, strong and her love for her friends and adopted family beams from the pages. The way she pulls herself out of the black hole with Teddy's help had my emotions all over the place and I admired her so much for it.The development of their relationship is stunning, heart-wrenching and devastatingly beautiful. It's a deliciously slow burn and you can't help but root for them. Their dance and their first time together are one of the most erotic scenes I've read.While you may think at the beginning that their love is unthinkable at some point you will see that these two are perfect for each other. That there was never another choice than for them being together, the love for the person they both lost the common denominator. With their friendship comes acceptance, with their love healing. I know I said Jonah was perfect in my review for Full Tilt. But Teddy? Glorious. Best book boyfriend EVER.I think Emma Scott upped the ante with this one. Full Tilt was already amazing but damn. This book did Jonah's story justice if that makes any sense. He was present in every word and thought. His love was shining through the loves of his life and while I thought Jonah's and Kacey's love can't be topped, this author did just that without diminishing it. Kacey and Theo? Utter bliss.Again, the writing is gorgeous, the secondary cast fantastic. At the end there were tears, yes, but they were a mix of a bit sad and a big junk of happiness, enough humor to help you through the sad parts. My emotions are still clogging up my throat. Rarely have I read a story that made me feel so much like the Full Tilt duet, it is hands down one of my top 10 favorites.Dear Emma Scott, please consider writing novellas about these two. I hate to leave Kacey, Theo and Jonah. They are so deep under my skin and hold a special place in my heart.
M**D
Emma Scott made my heart and soul sing with love. Epic conclusion to this spectacular duet. My favorite this year.
I was a bawling mess when I finished Full Tilt. I wasn't prepared for that ending. At all. I think that's why the story and the characters hit me so hard. Jonah, Kacey and Theo had made an impact on me. Now after finishing All In I appreciate Full Tilt and Emma Scott's storytelling even more especially for the story and how she chose to tell it. All In can't be read as a standalone and why would one rob themselves of Full Tilt. It's truly extraordinary and so was All In. This duet is nothing but epic.Full Tilt was Jonah's book and All In was Teddy's. I was very intrigued by Teddy in Full Tilt and I liked him. Knowing how Full Tilt ended and where it would go in All In I wasn't at all frustrated or disappointed. I had already established a connection with Jonah, Kacey and Teddy so I was very excited to see how Emma Scott would make that constellation happen and how. She succeeded in doing that flawlessly. The foundation of Kacey and Teddy's friendship was so well written and done with such an ease. The development from friends to lovers felt organic and never forced. Just right.Their journey towards acceptance of Jonah's death was excruciatingly painful at times, raw but also beautifully honest in how they both handled grief. Cause man did Kacey and Teddy grieve. She was numbing herself with booze and Teddy with work, helping/pleasing others and neglecting himself and his wants/needs in life. Kacey slowly started to let go of her grief because of Teddy and his unconditional support. How they found solace in one another, how their friendship grew to more was so beautifully written. It felt real, believable and I was anticipating it. Couldn't contain my excitement.Teddy definitely stole the show. I liked him in Full Tilt and I loved him fiercely in All In. He hid so much of himself in Full Tilt and here in All In he let it all out. It was the little things that moved me and showed who Teddy really was. In words but most certainly also in his actions. For example when a drunk guy was hitting on Kacey and Teddy demanded an apology for Kacey. Not for him but Kacey. He truly was the rock everybody leaned on and how he loved Jonah and Kacey was intoxicating and heartbreaking. He was so patient, loyal and respectful towards Jonah's memory and Kacey who once again surprised me with her strength. She was a fighter and once she embraced the gift Jonah gave her she went all out and loved Teddy with her entire being.There was so much love, hope and light in All In. Also some very sexy times. A certain dance scene between Kacey and Teddy will stay with me for its seductive writing and build up. It was so sexy, I could feel every word like they crawled under my skin. Hitting me right where they were intended:) The build up between them and the release was explosive. Magnificent!All In delivered everything and so much more. I'm so satisfied and content with the conclusion to Kacey and Teddy's story. Emma Scott creates magic with words and she definitely put me under a spell. I read to escape, to be captured by the characters and their story. She succeeded again with All In and she did it so effortlessly and in such an intelligent way that I'm at a loss for words. My heart and soul is filled and sings with love. All In is a must read!5 BadAssDirtyATreasureOutOfTheRuinStars
A**N
A beautiful and satisfying conclusion to the Full Tilt Duet.
All In by Emma Scott is an emotional, slow burn, friends to lovers, contemporary romance and the conclusion of the Full Tilt Duet. The story picks up where Full Tilt ends following Kacey and Theo (Teddy) in dual POV as they navigate the aftermath of losing Jonah.Kacey is a wreck. She took off and moved out of state without telling anyone. Her grieving is self-destructive and life-threatening. Theo tracks her down, coming to her rescue, and committing to help her through it. They form a long distance friendship as Kacey starts over in New Orleans and Teddy goes to college in Las Vegas. As they grieve, heal and pursue goals their friendship progresses into more.As much as I loved Full Tilt, I wasn't sure if this book would be able to compare. For the most part, it did a good job. I don't remember there being typos in book one, but this one had a few that pulled me out of the story. It wasn't quite as emotional, I wasn't wrecked while reading it.Overall, I really enjoyed seeing Kacey and Teddy fall in love and fight for their relationship. I loved them together as a couple. Their story was compelling, sweet, and thought-provoking. A beautiful and satisfying conclusion to the duet.
A**Z
All in with this duology!
This is the best book I'ved read and I've been reading a lot of great books. VEry emotional and beautiful. A masterpiece full of love.
C**S
Amazing sequel
Jonah is gone and the aftermath is pain. Jonah was a truly amazing character so I didn't know how much I'd enjoy a book about his girl and his brother picking up the pieces and rebuilding a life together but I just couldn't put this book down.A big part of this book is about grieving, about falling to the lowest of lows and then getting back up.Theo and Kacey supported each other through a tragedy that consumed their lives and slowly build an amazing friendship. It was the tragedy that ultimately brought them together because no one else could understand them better than the other.Their romance was sweet and slow, peppered with a lot of doubt and pining and very different from what Kacey and Jonah had in the first book.Not for a minute did they forget or disrespect Jonah's memory.This duet made such an impression. It is a must read!Safety: 4+ explicit / semi-explicit scenesTWs: alcohol addiction, loss of a loved one, miscarriage
C**F
Beautifully Poignant Romance
This is the second book in the Full Tilt Duet and is as good as the first. I took a break between the two books because it took me so long to recover from the first as it was so emotional. This book is slightly less traumatic but no less beautiful.After Kacey disappears and the rest of the family falls apart, Theo finally receives word 6 months later from a worried colleague that Kacey is in New Orleans and needs help. He drops everything to get to her and reach out a hand. This meeting starts a very slow process of healing for them both and Jonah’s family.I love how Kacey and Theo’s relationship develops slowly over thousands of hours on the phone. I also like how Kacey manages to pick herself up with support of her new friends in New Orleans and Theo over the phone and a few trips to visit.The author manages to convey the beauty of both Las Vegas and New Orleans, both very different cities. I always enjoy it when an author helps me understand the environment the characters live in because your surroundings definitely help shape your state of mind and New Orleans is a place of healing for Kacey.I would recommend you get your box of tissues ready whilst reading this book. It’s almost as much of a tear jerker as the first, but not quite. Only read this if you are in need of an emotional release. This is a not a cheerful easy read, but it is a very satisfying one that helps you feel lighter for having read it. I will definitely be looking out for this author again, but maybe after lockdown ends!
@**A
OH MY
Emma, you have done it again! I was a little scared to read this thinking it wouldn't live up to Full Tilt, but this book was so beautifully heartbreaking and I loved it even more😭🥹
A**R
Very very good! I recommend this + the first book! You won't regret it!
I love Emma Scott! She made me feel to accept the truth without hating The Tattoo Artist! And she made me love both of them,too.
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