For a guy who claims to hate chick-flick moments, Dean Winchester sure knows a lot about them. So much, in fact, that he's written books with them and actually succeeded in becoming the next best-selling romcom author of the century, some even dubbing him as the 'next Nicolas Sparks' (he still hasn't figured out if this was meant to be a compliment or not). What the general population don't know is that the romantic moments between the main characters are actually based on true events from the lives of Dean and his best friend, Castiel Shurley.
While he's even getting a movie deal out of all this fiasco, his parents and everyone else he knows still think he's leeching off of Bobby at Sioux Falls. Sam, the only one to know Dean is the mysterious Hector Afranian, keeps on encouraging him to tell Castiel about all this, and Dean's just a poor sap stuck in the middle of all these stupid conflicts that should stay in his books.
So Dean does what he always does whenever he's troubled; he writes.
For a guy who claims to hate chick-flick moments, Dean Winchester sure knows a lot about them. So much, in fact, that he's written books with them and actually succeeded in becoming the next best-selling romcom author of the century, some even dubbing him as the 'next Nicolas Sparks' (he still hasn't figured out if this was meant to be a compliment or not). What the general population don't know is that the romantic moments between the main characters are actually based on true events from the lives of Dean and his best friend, Castiel Shurley.
While he's even getting a movie deal out of all this fiasco, his parents and everyone else he knows still think he's leeching off of Bobby at Sioux Falls. Sam, the only one to know Dean is the mysterious Hector Afranian, keeps on encouraging him to tell Castiel about all this, and Dean's just a poor sap stuck in the middle of all these stupid conflicts that should stay in his books.
So Dean does what he always does whenever he's troubled; he writes.