

Hell, you NEED to read all of Vi Keeland’s books. So, long-story-short, you NEED to read this book. You just don’t get enough stories from the male POV in romance (in my humble opinion). I also loved that parts of the story were told from Hunter’s POV.

(Although I hope Yakshit isn’t her HEA, just because I’m not sure I can read that name during a sex scene and not giggle)Īside from great characters, a few other things you can count on in a Vi Keeland book are: 1) hot sex scenes, 2) simmering sexual tension, 3) comedy befitting all the best romantic comedies you’ve ever read/seen, and 4) hilarious dialogue that has a nice, snappy flow to it. If Izzy ever gets a story of her own, I’d 1-click the crap out of it. It was a pleasure reading about their mother-daughter bonding. I loved her scenes with her step-daughter, Izzy, too. She’s made some mistakes in relationships in the past, so she’s not quick to fall on her back with her legs up in the air, even under a near-constant onslaught of Hunter’s yummy, sexy, hotness. If you want to know Hunter’s reasons for only wanting sex, not love.well, you’ll just have to read the book. He’s not just a jerk who is afraid to settle down. I love that he has a decent reason for being a bit of a commitment-phobe, too.

Like, drunk elephant falling off a tightrope HARD. He’s hot (and he knows it), he’s foul-mouthed (in a dirty, rough sex kind of way), he goes after what he wants (in this case Natalia) with a single-minded purpose that would be scary if it wasn’t so completely over-the-top sexy, and when he does fall in love, he falls HARD. One thing that Vi Keeland seems to do with ease is create sexy, over-confident alpha males that I’d probably want to throat-chop in real life, but that are so completely loveable on the page.
