Perfect for You
Publisher Description
“A very enjoyable read with a believable plot, likeable characters, and some sexy lovin’ on the side.” — Guilty Pleasures Book Reviews
Freya Godwin's muse has gone MIA.
With Freya just hired to redesign the top adult website company in the country, her creativity couldn't have chosen a worse time to disappear. Determined to get her sexy back, Freya puts an ad online, hoping to find the right man to inspire her.
Unfortunately, all roads point back to her upstairs neighbor Greg Cavanaugh. He's everything she doesn't want: a playboy and scumbag lawyer. Except if he's so wrong for her, why does being with him make her believe anything is possible?
Reader alert! If you're looking for...
a slow burn;
neighbors-to-lovers;
a player reformed;
best friend siblings;
the perfect beach read...
You've found the right book. Proceed with abandon.
Customer Reviews
Light and fun
An easy, enjoyable read
Lots of Filler
I like filler though, because a lot of times I’m reading on my phone to fill time!
Perfect for You
While I enjoyed the relationship dynamic between Freya and Anna, outside of it this was just another predatory and hyper possessive “romance” that could use more proofreading. There’s a lot of oversight ranging from what exactly Freya’s “muse” is to Connor following Anna’s contradictory advice despite Freya having already told him she doesn’t like chocolate, and him having already questioned her about it.
This author demonstrates an alarming amount of ignorance in the form of racism and transphobia when she uses racial slurs against Romani people and calls transgender people freaks. The way they address being Romani as an occupation, rather than an ethnic group with a long history of being oppressed, and transitional surgery as something casually thrown around, rather than a deeply personal matter that has nothing to do with other people, is more than problematic. They also don’t appear to understand the difference between Spanish, Hispanic, and Latino or what a web designer’s work actually entails, the latter undermining much of the story.