
Title | : | Table for Two (A Family Business #3) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | - |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Kindle Edition |
Number of Pages | : | 212 |
Publication | : | First published September 1, 2015 |
Does she dare have seconds?
Mallory Ford hasn't seen her ex, Travis Kincaid, since she caught him in a rather compromising position a year ago. Now he's back in town, and while heat still flickers along Mal's skin when he's near, she's already learned her lesson—the oh-so-hard way.
Except that Travis is playing to win Mal's heart, for good. Which is perfectly ridiculous. Nothing can put Mal's heart back together again, especially not the man who broke it. Some mistakes can't be erased…unless Travis can prove to Mal that what they have is too perfect to forget.
Table for Two (A Family Business #3) Reviews
-
Well, that was a colossal waste of time.
I went into this completely blind, liked the blurb and was expecting an angst filled, cheating hero book. They never deal with the cheating, we get an apology and a little inner guilt, but he spends most of the book cajoling her into sex, and she suffers from terminal treacherous body syndrome.
Don’t waste your time or money on this one. -
I had to read this once I'd inadvertently read some spoilers. For those who wish to know .
This could have been a total angst fest, but emotionally there was no connection with the h or the H. It may be because the betrayal happened "off camera" so to speak and prior to us getting invested with the H and the h, yet I don't think so. It was just seemed that neither characters had the depth to pull the reader into their story. It had flashes of potential, just flashes mind. Nor did it make me want to read the other two books in the series. -
2.5 lackluster stars.
At the end of the day, I don't have much to say about this one. I didn't care for Mal -- I thought she was whiny. I didn't care for Travis -- at the end of the day, he even admits himself that he cheated and honestly, even as angry as Mal was, I still didn't feel like he had to work hard enough to win her the second time. Then we devolve into this push-pull broken-up-but-still-in-love thing that should have satisfied my inner angst whore, Violet, but when I looked over at her, she was filing her nails, looking bored and wondering why we weren't watching the Ruth Wilson version of Jane Eyre.
I doubt I'll ever pick this one up again. Ultimately disappointing. -
Miniseries:
A Family Business -
This was a cute little fluff read, predictable characters and plot but keeps you entertained.
-
Fun read. Terrible cover art.