Billed as sexy and hilarious, but I don’t recall any funny moments. It dragged at times. The author shouts out Tessa Bailey and I could see that influence in the open-door moments. Rosie and Aiden are NYU in-class adversaries, forced to work together to write a book. The defense of romance novels felt heavy-handed to me, in a preaching-to-the choir kind of way. I’m already reading a romance, so while I agree that it’s a disrespected genre, I’m already a fan. Rosie is Peruvian, and I wish that would have been highlighted even more. Despite all that, I liked the book and would read more from this author. (7.75)
Classic fake-dating trope mixed with The Hating Game. Catalina Martin needs a boyfriend for her sister’s wedding, so the whole family doesn’t look at her with pity. The groom’s brother is her ex, and he’s recently engaged. The only one willing to help is her enemy colleague, Aaron Blackford. Nothing new of overly inventive, although the Spanish flavor was nice. Slow burn and then a fair amount of spice. Aaron seemed to have pretty good people and communication skills once he was fake dating Catalina, so I’m not sure why he didn’t use those skills before to apologize and express his feeling for her. There’s nothing overly memorable about the book, but I enjoyed it. I’ll happily read the next one about Catalina’s best friend. (8)
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