: Reviewers from Professor Romance note that the book shines because of its "message of found family for two people who have lived lives feeling unloved".
At eighteen, life feels like it’s in shambles, and she blames one man: Alaric Marshall . After her mother's death, Alaric appeared as her controlling guardian, eventually sending her away to an all-girls reform school—a place defined by iron-clad regulations. Hey, Mister Marshall
While the "spiciness" is definitely there—reviewers on rate the steam level at a solid 4 out of 5—the real hook is the deeper emotional connection. : Reviewers from Professor Romance note that the
Just as Poe is eyeing the finish line of graduation, Alaric throws a final curveball: he arrives at the school as the new principal and stops her from graduating. Poe is determined to make him pay for the years of perceived tyranny, but as they collide in the halls of St. Mary’s, the line between hate and something much more dangerous begins to blur. Why Readers are Obsessed Mary’s, the line between hate and something much
Are you team Alaric, or do you think Poe should have stayed focused on her revenge? Let me know in the comments! Saffron A. Kent's Hey, Mister Marshall - Professor Romance
Whether you’re in it for the angst, the enemies-to-lovers friction, or the heartbreaking backstories of two "broken" characters, Hey, Mister Marshall is a standout in the New Adult genre. You can dive into the series starting with My Darling Arrow or pick this up as a standalone, but be warned: once you enter the world of St. Mary’s Rebels, it’s hard to leave.
: It hits all the right notes for fans of forbidden age-gap stories, though some readers on Goodreads have debated the execution and length.