Download Dog Food and Diamonds: A Romantic Comedy AudioBook Free
If someone were to create a novel about the world of big-box retail, it could very well be considered a grab carrier of horrors and tragedies, detailing the dismal pay and extended hours that employees put up with in the name of low prices and just-good-enough products all so the bigwigs and the bean counters can cream their pockets with trumped up stock options. Maybe it's about that. Luckily, this publication isn't. Instead, from the lively romantic humor that commences when Jeff Martin, son of the owner of the third-largest retailer in america, shows up at his father's Minnesota corporate and business office, recently minted business cards with the letters MBA after his name, ready to take the reins. There's just one problem: His daddy thinks his son is a frivolous playboy who'd run the business into the ground. Jeff has a hard time making a case otherwise, and only some quick thinking offers him ways to prove his value: He must work as an assistant supervisor in one of Martco's stores for per annum. And he can't tell anybody who he's. Welcome to Delburg, Oregon, an average city with an average Martco. Like all the Martcos, they sell from dog food to diamonds. Carol Kinnington is a single mom who's been hoping to put her life again together since her husband gave up both her and his lucrative law practice in favor of a young Navajo women who seduced him with peyote and calmness pipes. If Carol can just get promoted to Assistant Supervisor, she'll earn enough to get out of her dingy apartment and make a life for herself and her five-year-old son. Then a certain Jeff "Garby" swoops directly into take the work she is aware of she deserves. What goes on next is a energetic romantic humor about two people from wildly different worlds whose shopping carts collide - and finally, against great chances, still discover a way to show up in love. It's Romeo and Juliet over a blue light special. It's When Harry Met Sally in newspaper or plastic material. It's a tale as old as time itself - nevertheless, you still need to be out of the store by ten.