Tag: NAL Books

Review: The Shadows by J.R. Ward

Review: The Shadows by J.R. Ward

This is the worst BDB book that I have ever read. The only reason it’s not a DNF is because I bought the book instead of getting it from the library. Forget the series being a train wreck. The was like an explosion. An explosion of epic proportions. Just when you don’t think it can […]

Guest Review: Hero by Samantha Young

Guest Review: Hero by Samantha Young

Tracy’s review of Hero by Samantha Young. Alexa Holland is shocked when she walks into a photo shoot (she’s the PA to Benito, the photographer) after being on vacation and finds Caine Carraway, millionaire businessman, the subject of the shoot. Alexa is completely shaken as she had found out just months earlier that father had […]

Guest Review: The Dominant by Tara Sue Me

Guest Review: The Dominant by Tara Sue Me

Judith’s review of The Dominant (The Submissive Trilogy #2) by Tara Sue Me Nathaniel West doesn’t lose control.  As the playboy CEO of West Industries, he governs the boardroom during the day; as a strict dominant with exacting rules, he commands the bedroom at night. He never takes on inexperienced submissives, but when Abigail King’s […]

Guest Review: The Week Before the Wedding by Beth Kendrick

Guest Review: The Week Before the Wedding by Beth Kendrick

  After enduring a chaotic childhood, Emily McKellips yearns for a drama-free life, complete with a white picket fence. Her dreams are about to come true: She has a stellar career, a gorgeous house, and a fiancé any woman would die for. But as friends and family arrive in picturesque Valentine, Vermont, for her wedding, […]

Guest Review: The Dominant by Tara Sue Me

Guest Review: The Dominant by Tara Sue Me

Whitley’s review of The Dominant (The Submissive Trilogy #2) by Tara Sue Me Nathaniel West doesn’t lose control. As the playboy CEO of West Industries, he governs the boardroom during the day; as a strict dominant with exacting rules, he commands the bedroom at night. He never takes on inexperienced submissives, but when Abigail King’s […]