Drawn To You
A Billionaire Romance
Publisher Description
“Landon is just so hot, the pages are burning!”
I spent one perfect night with Landon Court.
I pretended to be someone else.
Now, he's found me.
And he's determined to make me pay for deceiving him.
But how can I resist when the payment he demands is so, so sweet?
On the night she discovers her ex’s engagement, Rachel meets Landon, the sexiest man she’s ever seen, and he mistakes her for a hooker. The thing is, he’s so sexy…what harm can there be in losing herself in his touch just for one night?
Landon prefers his women beautiful and sophisticated, with no desire for commitment, so when his brother ignores his protests and sends him a hooker on his birthday, he’s surprised by how willing he is to continue paying for her services. It should be easy, except she’s no hooker, and she has no intention of letting him into her life.
As the billionaire owner of Swanson Court Hotels, Landon is used to getting what he wants, and Rachel is not going to be an exception.
Drawn to You is the first book in the Swanson Court Series. It is a contemporary billionaire romance novel. The other books in this series are -
Addicted to You, Swanson Court Series #2
Lost In You, Swanson Court Series #3
Landon, Swanson Court Series #4
Because of You, Swanson Court Series #5
This free romance novel is for people who love steamy books with strong alpha men. Fans of Billionaire romance books like The Crossfire series by Sylvia Day and Fifty Shades of Grey by E L James will love this one.
Customer Reviews
CLIFFHANGER!!!
It's a cliffhanger, and looks like book 2 is a cliffhanger too so that you have to pay for them before you find out what happens in the story. I haven't read bk2 or bk3, and I won't, but from bk1, there is NO need for a cliffhanger. It reeks of a money grab. There was enough 'faph' in bk1 that could have been managed and made into one book instead of 3.
The 'faph' being 'does she, doesn't she'... 'will he, won't he'... 'should I, shouldn't I'... etc and so on. It follows the annoying trend of the characters being too childish to actually have a conversation with each other, so they'd rather whine and pine for pages which will conveniently fill a book without taxing the author for content.