Shipwrecked Seduction by Rosemary J. Anderson

Shipwrecked Seduction (MF)
Grade-C+
Hotness Level-Inferno
Kink Level-No Kink
Genre-Contemporary
Reviewed by Kate
Before we begin, please be aware that the publisher has tagged this book as “forced seduction.”
 
Jacob is a self-made billionaire and he holds Daisy’s father’s fate in his hands. When Daisy reluctantly approaches Jacob to help save her father, he agrees on the condition that she becomes his mistress.
 
This book has it all! We’re talking a virgin, a billionaire, a bargain, pirates, and a deserted island. How can this book fail?
 
I couldn’t get over the fact that Daisy, a 23 year old virgin, was quite schooled in the art of seduction. For being as sheltered as she was, I couldn’t help but wonder how exactly she knew so much. She falls for Jacob quickly, despite the nasty agreement. You’ve got to give a woman credit for being able to seperate mind-blowing sex from the contract she signed saying she has to provide sex.
 
Jacob was a rare billionaire that knew how to survive on a deserted island. I believe while attending the school of hard knocks he must have taken a course in survival, learning which things were edible and which things weren’t as well as how to construct a shelter with hardly any tools. He did ride the ass-or-not seesaw throughout the story. And generally ass-or-not seesaw riders are enough to make me hate a hero, but I honestly couldn’t get enough of Jacob.
 
If there was one thing that got on my nerves, it was both Daisy and Jacob’s attitude toward murder. Now I know that sounds funny and I’m not saying that they were pro-murder. It’s just that they were so anit-murder. We’re talking kidnapping, sex-hungry pirates. Jacob is prepared to kill Daisy if it comes down to it so she won’t have to suffer such a fate, but he’s not prepared to kill any of the pirates because that would be murder. They wouldn’t even think of killing any of the animals on the island for food.
 
Actually I enjoyed the crap out of this book. It’s one of those that I enjoyed more than I probably should have. I know it will be one that I will reread. If you enjoy reading about deserted islands, billionaires, virgins, and pirate villains, and you can ignore some outlandishness, give this one a try.

Return to You by Kate Perry

Return To You (Laurel Heights, #3)
Grade-C
Hotness Level-Blaze/Inferno
Kink Level-No Kink
Series-Laurel Heights #3
Genre-Contemporary
Reviewed by Kate
344 pages

It’s been eleven years since Michael left town to pursue his dreams in Hollywood, leaving the love of his life, Olivia, behind. Now he’s come back to film a movie and has to face Olivia again. Olivia’s been nursing her broken heart for the eleven years Michael’s been gone, but can she love someone who hurt her so badly before?
 
I have enjoyed each of the Laurel Heights books that I’ve read and this one is no exception. There is just so much inner turmoil and angst with Michael and Olivia. I just wanted to lock them in a room together until they got everything sorted out…oh wait, that happened (only it was a shed instead of a room) and they still managed to not get anything sorted out. Had this one been a little less angsty (I think that’s a word), I would have enjoyed it more. I did find the secondary romance between Olivia’s father and his assistant sweet and tender.
 
If you like low conflict romances along the lines of Jill Shalvis’s Lucky Harbor series, this is a series I would highly recommend.

Rebound by Sabrina York

Rebound (Tryst Island, #1)
Grade-C-
Hotness Level-Inferno
Kink Level-No Kink
Series-Tryst Island #1
Genre-Contemporary
Reviewed by Kate
84 pages

One weekend, Kristi and Cam both show up at the cabin that they own with other friends. That in itself wouldn’t be that unusual, but this time they both show up unattached. Usually at least one of them is in the middle of a relationship, but this time they are both free. So when a bet is made on a game of Hearts, there’s no reason for Cam and Kristi not to explore the lust that they each have for each other.
 
This one is a hard one for me to review because I didn’t have really strong feelings about it either way. Everything about the story was just so-so. If you like your romances to be low conflict and short, this might be worth reading. Unfortunately, I don’t think I’ll be trying the next book in this series.