Two Can Play
-
-
4.1 • 199 Ratings
-
-
- $4.99
Publisher Description
The Instant New York Times Bestseller!
An enemies-to-lovers spicy novella set in the world of video gaming from the New York Times bestselling author of Problematic Summer Romance—now in print and ebook!
Includes an all-new bonus chapter!
Viola Bowen has the chance of a lifetime: to design a video game based on her all-time favorite book series. The only problem? Her co-lead is Jesse F-ing Andrews, aka her archnemesis. Jesse has made it abundantly clear over the years that he wants nothing to do with her—and Viola has no idea why.
When their bosses insist a wintery retreat is the perfect team-building exercise, Viola can’t think of anything worse. Being freezing cold in a remote mountain lodge knowing Jesse is right next door? No, thank you.
But as the snow piles on, Viola discovers there’s more to Jesse than she knew, and heat builds in more ways than one.
Customer Reviews
Lovely
Another fun and lovely book from this author.
Great characters, awesome story line.
I would have preferred the book to be longer but the story was perfect…. Leaves readers a lot of room to continue the story of Viola and Jesse in their own minds .
Left me wanting more
I feel like the book left off in the middle of the storyline. I feel like the author could’ve taken this book a lot further there was so much more that she could have detailed about their relationship. She could have discussed more about them playing and creating the game together she could’ve mentioned what happened when people from both of the teams found out that they started dating. Was there any issues that they had to go through as a couple dealing with putting this game out plus working with two companies that technically did not like each other and were rivals. It wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t great either I felt like she could’ve done a lot more. This was definitely a letdown after I was introduced to this author by love hypothesis.
Not bad, not great
Not good, but not bad either. It’s clearly meant to be a fun, standalone story, and the plot actually develops pretty nicely even if it’s another cliché. Clichés aren’t a bad thing though. The only real problem for me was the writing… my god, so much of it was cringe and I was honestly sooooo close to DNFing it.