***3.5 STARS*** WORTH THE SCANDAL is the first book in the Worth It series featuring three brothers who run a luxury clothing store empire and gives us the first glimpses of the yummy Worth brothers. This first book is about Alex Worth, oldest brother and man in charge of the Worth empire, and h...
I rounded up to three stars cause the beginning was so good. But once the "big misunderstanding" happened both characters became way TSTL and I wanted to throw my iPad across the room. Very sexy in the first half to three quarters of the book ... utter crap for the last quarter. I will most likely p...
I love books about sexy brothers :)
Kindle free download 1/1/13.
This should get a solid 3.5 but GR doesn't have half stars... *glares* Anyways, the book was good. I wasn't too crazy about the heroine (she annoyed me at times, especially when they came back from the trip and she acted all insecure and uncertain about their relationship.) And I also didn't agree w...
This was kind of a guilty pleasure read for me. The plot is straight out of the Harlequin Presents line, but it happens to be a ridiculous plot that I really like. I feel like I've read a few dozen versions of the Hot Billionaire Boss Falls for Mousey/Plain/Curvy Assistant, Dumps Her, Secret Baby!,...
Another sweet boss/employee story. With a little bit of suspense... did she or didn't she? And a bit of heartbreak and angst. Not much sex... really it was mostly fade-to-black or remembering bits that weren't explicit, but you definitely got the idea they were completely into each other. But even w...
I have read and enjoyed this trope in the past but this one fell short for me. The heroine was remarkably innocent and naive for this day and age. I liked that she didn't decide to wait around hoping the hero would decide he trusted her but she went and took care of business. I didn't like the fe...
"Strictly business? Try telling that to her heart...""Worth It, Book 1"Alexander Worth, President and CEO of Worth Luxury Goods, is a man never to be crossed. His unwavering sense of responsibility to the family business requires him to always be in complete and utter control. Until it comes to Tess...