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Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft
Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft









Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft

An estimated 3 million companies operate 217 million vehicles globally, and the haulage sector accounts for around 9% of global carbon dioxide emissions, with demand for road freight set to double before 2050. The report also concludes that road freight decarbonisation is close to an inflection point “due to increasing regulatory and market pressure, and will evolve faster than many expect”. The main barriers are a lack of regulatory incentives, poor infrastructure, and limited demand from shippers.Ĭalled Decarbonising Road Freight: Getting into Gear, the report is drawn from views garnered from road freight leaders. February’s theme is Black–authors, characters, and concerns of the community.Shell has released a joint report with Deloitte that shows there are major global barriers to achieving cleaner road freight. Recipe Of Love: A Contemporary Gay Romance (Finding Shore, #2)Īuditioning For Love: A Contemporary Gay Romance Love Fanatic: An M/M Contemporary Gay Romanceĭown By Contact (Wilmington Breakers, #1) The first book in the series was cool, but this one is one I might read again. It was sweet and fun and I really liked how the MCs’ individual lives/backgrounds/interests were fleshed out. If I was ranking this month’s reads, Hassell’s Down by Contact would come in first and Felix and the Prince would take second place. I got out of them what I could when I was reading them, so that’s fine. Leaving that, when I look at some of the titles now, I’m at a loss when I try to recall what they were about. I’ve done both in the past, but helping is much more productive and keeps my conscience clear. I would rather help authors than drag them.

Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft

I did start writing a review for it, though it was more like post-print line editing and sensitivity reading, but there was so much wrong with it, I just couldn’t take it.

Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft

The writing style was okay, but the story and characters were appalling. Kindle Alexander’s Reservations was surprisingly terrible–I tried, but I had to drop it. I wish I could say that I didn’t encounter anything that begged to be banned and burned, but that was not the case. The rest of January saw a few new-to-me authors. I’m looking at it as something of a challenge because I’m interested to see if Hassell can convince me that one of the MCs deserves to be forgiven after what he did in book two. January, by default, was M/M.įor the latter half of 2017, I was mostly looking forward to the second book in Santino Hassell’s Barons series, Down by Contact, which was slated to be released mid-January. I didn’t have much of a plan for reading when the year started, but now I think I’m going to attempt to do themed months.











Drawn In by Sean Ashcroft