Playing With Her Doctors
A Medical MFM Menage Romance
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3.5 • 233 Ratings
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- $3.99
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- $3.99
Publisher Description
Getting pregnant? A big deal. Getting pregnant by your handsome, hands-on personal physician? An even bigger deal. And don’t forget, he has a business partner who loves being in on the action as well.
I’ve put off seeing a doctor for a long time, so when I finally work up the nerve, I decide to go for the best. Doctors Ryder Stephenson and Ranger Stevens have a very exclusive practice on Park Avenue. They’re two incredibly gorgeous, rich as all hell plastic surgeons with a helluva magic touch.
Except, my consultation goes off the rails.
My physicians are completely irresistible, and the temperature in the exam room heats up until it’s near sizzling. We’re damn near breaking the law.
But you know what I really want?
A baby.
… And the doctors are only too happy to oblige. They tell me to come back for another consultation … and another … and another … until soon, I’m a mommy-to-be.
Yeah, whoops. This wasn’t supposed to happen.
But now, I want it all, and the gorgeous, huge, growly physicians won’t stop until I’m mommy to a dozen of their children.
We’re off the reservation with crazy, over-the-top insta-love between two gorgeous doctors and a sassy curvy girl that will make you want to put on a flimsy hospital gown. There are no swords that cross because the story is all about her. Not responsible for thermometers that break. Reader beware.
As with all my books, this one is safe, with no cheating, and a HEA guaranteed.
Customer Reviews
Where is the plot?
Why, pray-tell, did you skip the fact she was having a flashback and just jump into it with no context whatsoever. This books flow is so bad I only read 10% of it. There are some parts that are missing. And the trans comment was seriously unnecessary.
Anti-LGBTQ
Stopped reading after the author expressed some (totally unnecessary to the story) negative opinions about trans people and then instantly claimed that she “had nothing against them”.
Also, anyone else find it annoying when the main character casually peruses her body in the mirror to describe it to us? I usually give it a pass but it was the entire first two pages of the book, before we even know the person or what’s going on. No one does this is real life.
Shallow
Picture completely inaccurate of characters. Repetitive, more vulgar and demeaning than It needed to be. Only redeeming quality is the happy ending.